Laos - Southern Laos (Chapter)

Transcription

Laos - Southern Laos (Chapter)
© Lonely Planet Publications Pty Ltd
265
Southern Laos
An enticing blend of archetypal Mekong River life, ancient Khmer temples, the cooler climes
of the Bolaven Plateau and three remote and little-visited eastern provinces make southern
Laos a region of stark contrasts for the adventurous traveller. The whole area remains refreshingly raw, but as with other parts of Laos a series of community-based tourism projects have
made it possible to experience an authentic Laos far from the beaten track.
The obvious, almost unavoidable staging point is Pakse, the Mekong riverside capital of
Champasak Province with a relaxed ambience for a ‘city’. From here the Mekong flows south
past the ancient Khmer religious complex at Wat Phu Champasak and Don Daeng, before
expanding its girth at Si Phan Don, the ‘four thousand islands’ that straddle the Cambodian
border. Among this stunningly beautiful maze of waterways are the palm-lined Don Khong,
Don Det and Don Khon, where you can soak up the million-dollar sunsets from your hammock.
Heading east from Pakse you climb to the cooler climes of the Bolaven Plateau, with
its picturesque waterfalls and high-grade coffee. Keep going and you start getting well
off the beaten track and into the little visited provinces of Salavan, Sekong and Attapeu
where minority ethnic groups are still surprised to see falang visitors. The adventurous at
heart can tackle the southern swing motorbike loop. So whether you’re seeking an offbeat experience or are happy just lazing in a riverside hammock, prepare to stay longer in
southern Laos than planned.
SOUTHERN LAOS
HIGHLIGHTS
Soak up the rural lifestyle from the horizon-
tal perspective of your hammock on the
laidback Mekong islands of Si Phan Don
(p285)
Wake up early for a dramatic sunrise at the
ancient Khmer temple complex at Wat Phu
Champasak (p278)
Bolaven
Plateau
Walk and wade your way into the jungles
and stay in a remote Lavae village in the
Se Pian NPA (p285)
Nam Tok
Katamtok
Gaze in awe at 100m-high waterfalls and
sip fair-trade coffee on the cool Bolaven
Plateau (p298)
Ride out to the wild east of Attapeu (p308)
and back via Nam Tok Katamtok (p307) on
the Southern Swing (p297)
Wat Phu
Champasak
Si Phan
Don
Se Pian
NPA
Attapeu
266 S O U T H E R N L A O S
lonelyplanet.com
May. Some relief comes from relatively soothing river breezes, but not much. The Bolaven
Plateau, on the other hand, is relatively cool
all year, and from November to February it’s
downright cold after dark. The plateau also
has its own mini weather system, which brings
rain right into December.
National Protected Areas
Southern Laos has six National Protected
Areas (NPAs), covering habitats as diverse as
the riverine forest along the Mekong River in
Phu Xieng Thong NPA to the remote mountains of Se Xap NPA. For now Phu Xieng
Thong (p275) and Se Pian NPA (p285) are
the easiest to get in to, with village-based
treks the best way to do it. Dong Hua Sao
NPA, at the edge of the Bolaven Plateau, and
the wilderness of Dong Amphan NPA can
also be accessed with more time, money and
organisation.
ὈὈὈ
ὈὈὈ
ὈὈ
ὈὈ
ὈὈὈ
ὈὈ
Ὀ
ὈὈ
ὈὈὈὈὈ
ὈὈ
ὈὈ
The Mekong Valley is hot most of the year
but becomes hellishly so between March and
0
0
SOUTHERN LAOS
9
9
Se Ban
Nuan NPA
Don
Se
Salavan
15
Ban Beng
Sanasombun
Utayan Bajiang Champasak
Ban
Vang Tao Saphai
Pakse
20
23
Tat
Fan
Dong
Hua
Sao NPA
Ban Muang
Phonthong
Champasak
Wat Phu Champasak
Ban Don
Talat
Sukhuma
Tat Meelook
Paksong
Phuoi
Ban Nong
Luang
CHAMPASAK
Ban
Thang Beng
NPA
Ban Munla
Pamok
Ban Kanluang
Don
Khong
Si Phan
Don
Don Det
Don Khon
Nong
Khiang
Hat Sai
Khun
Siempang
Ban Nakasang
Dom Kralor
Border Crossing
Trapaeng Kriel
Se
Ban Bengkhua Kham
Nam Tok
Katamtok
Attapeu
(Samakhi Xai)
Kiet Ngong
18
Phu Asa
Ban Phapho
13
Ban Ta Ong
g
on
eK
Se Pian S
Dak Cheung
Sekong
(Muang Lamam)
16
16
Bolaven
Plateau
Lak 21
Muang
Kao
SEKONG
Tha Taeng
Tat Lo
Ka
m
an
Muang
Lao Ngam
mnoy
Khong
Sedon
Ubon Ratchathani
CAMBODIA
Ban Kaleum
Nong Bua
Phu Katae
(1588m)
Ban Khoua
Set
THAILAND
SOUTHERN LAOS
Vapi
SALAVAN
Se
Lakhonpeng
Se Xap
NPA
Tahoy
Toumlan
Lakhon Pheng
VIETNAM
Prince Souphanouvong's
Bridge (Destroyed &
Impassable)
Ban Muang
Chong
Mek
Hué
Samouy
Dong Phu
Vieng NPA
23
Phu Xieng
Thong NPA
Khe Sanh
Lao Bao
Muang Phin
SAVANNAKHET
Se Pon
Heuan
Hin
Dansavanh
ng
Songkhon
Paksong
23
100 km
60 miles
Border
Ban
Dong Crossing
Sepon
(Xepon)
Ko
Se Jam
pho
n
Dong
13 Seno
Atsaphangthong
Natad
(Xeno)
That Ing
Ban
Phalan
Hang
Lak 35
Savannakhet
Mukdahan
Keng Kok
Sonbuli
Border
That
Crossing
Phon
Se Na
Climate
Getting There & Around
There are three border crossings into
southern Laos – one each from Thailand,
Cambodia and Vietnam. Once you’re in the
region, the main roads are smooth and well
serviced by buses and sǎwngthǎew (passenger
trucks). The exceptions are Rte 18 between
Attapeu and Thang Beng in Champasak
Province, and all the roads running north
Sanamsay
ATTAPEU
Pa-am
Saisettha
Phu
Vong
Dong
Amphan NPA
Nong
Fa
18B
Pha
Meuang
Yalakhuntum
Sansai
Bo Y
Phou Keua
Border
Crossing
lonelyplanet.com
C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • Pa k s e 267
TREKKING IN SOUTHERN LAOS
Opportunities for trekking in southern Laos have really taken off in recent years, but despite the
range of hikes available, it remains a raw experience compared with the more developed parts of
northern Laos or neighbouring Thailand. Most of the hikes in southern Laos feature homestays
with Lao families, a great way to immerse yourself in the Lao way of life. It is possible to organise
some of these treks directly with local communities where there is an information centre, but
you may struggle without an English-speaking guide to help set things up. The tourism office in
Pakse is a useful starting point for the most popular treks in Champasak Province, or there are a
couple of reputable tour operators (p268) in Pakse that can organise these treks with experienced
guides to help interpret along the way. Costs average about US$20 to US$50 per day depending
on numbers, plus transport to access the trek.
See the boxed text, p 234 , for trekkers’ cultural tips, and visit the excellent website www.
ecotourismlaos.com for plenty of helpful information. Some of the more popular trekking
areas are:
Phu Xieng Thong NPA (p275) Starting from Pakse, take a three-day trek and river trip along
the Mekong. The village homestay is much like others in southern Laos, but the hermit nuns
maintaining a vow of silence for world peace are a famous fixture.
Se Pian NPA (p285) Striking out from Pakse, half-day elephant treks and nature walks around
Kiet Ngong (p283) offer stunning views of the 700-hectare Kiet Ngong wetlands. Longer two- and
three-day treks into Xe Pian’s forest reach remote Ta Ong villages via dugout canoe. Kingfisher
Lodge has knowledgeable English-speaking guides. Also accessible from remote Attapeu is a
waterfall trek with a homestay in Ban Mai.
Tat Lo (p301) This picturesque series of waterfalls is an affordable base for some straightforward
day-hikes to pretty villages. Costs are very reasonable, at 45,000K per person, and experienced
English-speaking guides are available on the spot.
and east of Salavan. Cargo boats no longer
operate on the Mekong.
CHAMPASAK PROVINCE
PAKSE
¯¾¡À§
%031 / pop 75,000
Gateway to the south, Pakse sits at the confluence of the Mekong River and the Se Don
(Don River) and is the capital of Champasak
Province. It was founded by the French in
1905 as an administrative outpost and has
grown rapidly since the Lao–Japanese Bridge
across the Mekong opened in 2002. Trade
with Thailand and Vietnam may be changing the face of the town, but tourism has also
taken off in recent years as southern Laos
emerges as an essential stop on the overland trail through the Mekong region. It’s
all about location, with Wat Phu, Si Phan
Don and Cambodia to the south, the Bolaven
Plateau and remote provinces to the east, and
Thailand to the west. If you are travelling in
the south, it is likely all roads will lead to Pakse
at some time during your trip.
The centre of Pakse retains the sort of
Mekong River lethargy found in towns like
SOUTHERN LAOS
Headline attractions include Wat Phu
Champasak, the Mekong River islands of Si
Phan Don and the Bolaven Plateau, adding up
to make Champasak one of the most popular
provinces in Laos. Champasak has a long history that began during the Funan and Chenla
empires between the 1st and 9th centuries
AD. Between the 10th and 13th centuries it
was part of the Cambodian Angkor empire.
Following the decline of Angkor between the
15th and late 17th centuries, this region was
absorbed into the nascent Lan Xang kingdom,
but broke away to become an independent Lao
kingdom at the beginning of the 18th century.
The short-lived Champasak kingdom had only
three monarchs: Soi Sisamut (r 1713–37), who
was the nephew of the long-reigning Lao king
Suriya Vongsa, Sainyakuman (r 1737–91), and
Fai Na (r 1791–1811).
Today Champasak Province has a population of more than 500,000, including lowland
Lao (many of them Phu Thai), Khmers and
a host of small Mon-Khmer groups, most of
whom inhabit the Bolaven Plateau region.
268 C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • Pa k s e
lonelyplanet.com
CRUISING THE MEKONG IN SOUTHERN LAOS
For those who like life on the water, there are now two cruise ships plying the waters between
Pakse and Si Phan Don. Both are very comfortable, but you’re tied to the itinerary once you book.
With smart accommodation now available in Champasak, Don Khong and Don Khone, you may
prefer to plot your own course.
The luxurious Vat Phou (www.asian-oasis.com) was the pioneer, operating a 34m steel-hulled
barge-cum-hotel. It offers 12 wooden staterooms with single berths and western bathrooms. A
three-day, two-night trip between Pakse and Don Khong takes in Wat Phu Champasak, Uo Moung
and Khon Phapheng falls. Fares vary, but start at €403 per person from May to October (when
there is only one trip per week), and €528 at other times (three per week).
Newcomer Mekong Islands Tours (www.cruisemekong.com) offers a similar set-up aboard a converted wooden cargo boat. However, their cruises are slightly longer, lasting five days and include
more time to explore Si Phan Don and surrounding villages. These trips start from €620 in the
‘green season’ (corresponding to May to October) or from €760 in the high season.
Savannakhet and Tha Khaek further north.
Fewer colonial-era buildings remain, but do
look for the grandiose, Franco-Chinese style
Chinese Society building on Th 10 in the centre
of town.
The vast Talat Dao Heung (New Market)
near the Lao–Japanese Bridge is one of the
biggest in the country, famous for its selection of fresh produce and coffee from the
fertile Bolaven Plateau. Short day trips from
Pakse can be made to Ban Saphai and Don
Kho (p275), weaving centres, 15km north
of town.
13; h8.30am-3.30pm Mon-Fri) ATM dispensing up to
2,000,000K in one hit, but with a US$5 charge.
POST
Main post office (cnr Th 8 & Th 1) South of the town
centre.
TOURIST INFORMATION
Hospital (%212 018; cnr Th 10 & Th 46)
Police (%212 145; Th 10)
Provincial Tourism Office (%212 021; Th 11;
h8am-noon & 1.30-4pm Mon-Fri) On the Se Don (Don
River) near the Lao Airlines office, the well-organised
English-speaking staff here can book you onto
community-based treks in Se Pian NPA and Phu Xieng
Thong NPA, and into homestays on Don Kho and Don
Daeng. There’s no charge for this service. They are also
armed with all the latest schedules for buses heading
anywhere from Pakse.
INTERNET ACCESS & TELEPHONE
TOUR OPERATORS
Information
EMERGENCY
SOUTHERN LAOS
ANZ Vientiane Commercial Bank (%254 371; Rte
There are several places to get a fast online
fix, all charging around 100K per minute or
6000K per hour, including the following:
Skynet (Rte 13; h8am-10pm)
Next Step Internet (Th 24; h8am-10pm)
SD Internet (Rte 13; h7am-8pm)
MONEY
BCEL (%212 770; Th 11; h8.30am-3.30pm Mon-Fri,
8.30-10am Sat) South of Wat Luang, BCEL has the best
rates for cash and travellers cheques and makes cash
advances on Visa and MasterCard. Also has ATMs around
the city, including one opposite the Sang Aroun Hotel.
Lao Development Bank (%212 168; Rte 13;
h8am-4pm Mon-Fri, 8am-3pm Sat & Sun) Changes
cash and travellers cheques in the smaller exchange
office; cash advances (Monday to Friday only) in the main
building.
Most hotels can arrange day trips to the
Bolaven Plateau, Wat Phu Champasak and Si
Phan Don. For longer and more adventurous
trips, try the following reputable companies:
Green Discovery (%252 908; www.greendiscovery
laos.com; Rte 13) Operates rafting, kayaking, mountain
biking and trekking trips. Development plans include a
new jungle zip-line and ecoresort in the Paksong area.
Xplore-Asia (%221 893; www.xplore-laos.com; Rte
13) Mountain biking, trekking and kayaking trips around
the south, including the Bolaven Plateau, Si Phan Don
and protected areas. During high season, day trips run to
Wat Phu (190,000K) and the Bolaven Plateau (150,000K),
including entry fees and guide.
Sights & Activities
Much more about being than seeing, Pakse’s
‘sights’ are limited.
lonelyplanet.com
C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • Pa k s e 269
a lot of dull documents chronicling the history
of the province. Once you get past the Lao
and Communist hammer- and-sickle flags
at the entrance you’re in the best part of the
museum – three very old Dong Son bronze
drums and striking 7th-century sandstone
lintels found at Uo Moung (Tomo Temple).
The simple textile and jewellery collection
CHAMPASAK HISTORICAL HERITAGE
MUSEUM
²Ø²Ø©ê½²×$´Öì©Ü¡¯½¹¸×©¦¾©¥¿¯¾¦×¡
Government-run museums in Laos do not
necessarily make for compulsive viewing, and
the Champasak Historical Heritage Museum (Rte 13;
admission 10,000K; h8.30-11.30am & 1.30-4pm) upholds
this grand tradition. It has a few artefacts and
PAKSE
0
0
0
0
French
Bridge
&
13
Th 14
1
Th
m
"
Chinese
Temple
13
&
5
3
Th
4
T
To Evening Market
(Talat Lak Song) (300m);
VIP Bus Station (300m);
Clinic Keo Ou Done
(Traditional Medicine Hospice)
(2.5km); Southern Bus
Terminal (6km); Paksong (50km);
Don Khong (125km);
Cambodian Border (158km)
14
S
"
#1
2
2
h4
36
Th
8
Th
Th 38
"
44 ?
17
‚
#
To Champasak
Oulayvan Minimart........................38
Phai Pailin Sundry Shop............... 39
Pizza Boy............................................ 40
Restaurant Na Dao.........................41
Sinouk Coffee Shop.......................42
Xuan Mai Restaurant..................... 43
B3
D2
C2
D5
C3
C2
DRINKING ?
Holiday Champa .............................44 B5
Talat Dao
Heuang (New
"
Market) n
47
Meko
ng
River
@
" 41
Arawan Riverside Hotel (400m);
Clinic Keo Ou Done (500m);
Mekong Paradise Resort (1km);
Victory Hi-Tech (2km);
Victory Beer Garden (2km);
Pakse Golf (3km)
TRANSPORT
Boat Landing.................................... 45 A4
Lao Airlines Office.......................... 46 C3
Mai Linh Express........................... (see 27)
Taxis & Sawngthaew to
Champasak & Chong Mek ...... 47 D4
Vat Phou Office ............................. (see 42)
i
"20
To Champasak (30km);
Vang Tao; Chong Mek
(37km)
‚
Th 14
6
" 19
LaoJapanese
Bridge
SOUTHERN LAOS
1
35
"
"@
38 @
32
3
Th
Church
4
Z
#
i
" 21
24
9
Th
<
" Catholic
@
"
9
Shopping Centre
G
#4
@
"
36
Th 46
#
f Champasak Plaza
"
Th 46
7 #̀
EATING @
Champady .........................................31 C2
Delta Coffee ......................................32 C3
Jasmine Restaurant........................33 C2
Ketmany Restaurant......................34 D2
Khem Khong Restaurant..............35 A4
Local Restaurants............................36 D2
Mengky Noodle Shop...................37 C2
Nazim Restaurant .........................(see 27)
11
16
42 Th 5
34
I
#
i
"22
i
" 23
45
@
" 35
I
#
4
Th 21
12
3
#
"
i
"@
" 25
26 i
i
"
@
" 43
1
Th
See Enlargement
5
#
2
Th
46 #
#
10 H
Th
10
Th
Th
1
i
"
3
Th
@
"
Se D
on
66
66
66
#
27
" 5 24 40
31 @
Th
2
2#
&
4
33 37
15 #
D4
C2
C3
C5
C2
C3
13
5
Th
6
6
i
" 28
Th 21
8
A13
I
##
6
" 29 2
"i
# 39@
@
"@
"
"
30 i
"
18 6
To Airport (3km);
Northern Bus Terminal (7km);
Ban Saphai (15km);
Don Kho (15km);
Vientiane (659km)
French
Bridge
0
!
200 m
0.1 miles
10
Th
‚
D
9
Th
3
SIGHTS & ACTIVITIES
Champasak Historical
Heritage Museum.......................14
Chinese Society Building.............15
Dok Champa Massage..................16
Friendship Bowling........................17
Wat Luang .........................................18
Wat Tham Fai (Wat Pha Bat) .......19
D5
C3
D2
C2
C2
C2
Th 11
2
C
Pakse Hotel .................................... 26 C2
Royal Pakse Hotel........................ 27 C2
Sabaidy 2 Guesthouse............... 28 D2
Saigon Champasak Hotel....... (see 27)
Sang Aroun Hotel........................ 29 D2
Sedone River Guesthouse........ 30 C2
‚
1
B
SLEEPING i
Champasak Grand Hotel .....20
Champasak Palace Hotel.....21
Daovieng 2 Hotel....................22
Hotel Salachampa..................23
Lankham Hotel........................24
Lao Chaleun Hotel .................25
‚
A
INFORMATION
ANZ Vientiane Commercial
Bank ....................................................1 D4
BCEL ........................................................2 C2
Green Discovery.................................3 D2
Hospital .................................................4 C3
Lane Xang Travel ...............................5 C2
Lao Development Bank...................6 D2
Main Post Office .................................7 A4
Next Step Internet.............................8 D2
Police ......................................................9 D3
Provincial Tourism Office.............10 C3
SD Internet ........................................11 D2
Skynet .................................................12 D2
Vietnamese Consulate..................13 D2
Xplore Asia ......................................(see 27)
400 m
0.2 miles
270 C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • Pa k s e
from the Nyaheun, Suay and Laven groups is
also interesting for its large iron ankle bracelets and ivory ear-plugs, as these are rarely
seen nowadays.
Also on the ground floor are musical instruments, stelae in the Tham script dating
from the 15th to 18th centuries, a water jar
from the 11th or 12th century, a small lingam
(Shiva phallus), plus a scale model of Wat Phu
Champasak.
Once you head upstairs you’ll be experiencing your last five minutes in the museum.
Apart from a small collection of Buddha images and forlorn-looking American weaponry,
it’s all headshots of Party members. Yawn.
SOUTHERN LAOS
WATS
There are about 20 wats in Pakse, among
which Wat Luang and Wat Tham Fai, both
founded in 1935, are the largest. A monastic school at Wat Luang (Th 11) features ornate
concrete pillars, carved wooden doors and
murals; the artist’s whimsy departs from
canonical art without losing the traditional
effect. Behind the sǐm is a monks’ school
in an original wooden building. A thâat on
the grounds contains the ashes of Khamtay
Loun Sasothith, a former prime minister in
the Royal Lao Government.
Wat Tham Fai (Rte 13) near the Champasak
Palace Hotel, is undistinguished except for its
spacious grounds, making it a prime site for
temple festivals. It’s also known as Wat Pha
Bat because there is a small Buddha footprint
shrine.
GOLF
Golf may seem an unlikely pursuit in southern
Laos, but swingers can practice their putting
at Pakse Golf (%030-534 8280; www.paksegolf.com; Ban
Phatana; h6am-6pm). The 18-hole golf course is
a bargain by international standards, costing just 1150B per round, including green
fees, clubs, caddy and a cart. Quite a technical
course, it is located near the Mekong River,
about 3km southeast of town. Head east from
the Champasak Grand Hotel and follow signs
to the right after about 500m.
BOWLING
Friendship Bowling (%020-7786 8886; Th 11; h9am11pm) is a bargain for those looking for some
pin action. It is 7000K before midday, including shoes, and 12,000K thereafter. There
wasn’t that much friendship the evening we
lonelyplanet.com
bowled, as it was basically empty. Snooker is
just 3000K.
GYM
The Champasak Palace Hotel (%212 777; www.
champasak-palace-hotel.com; Rte 13; h2-10pm) gym is
free for guests and a cheap 7000K per day for
visitors to use the weight room. There’s also
massage, sauna and jacuzzi.
MASSAGE & SAUNA
There are several good massage centres in
Pakse if you need to rest those weary muscles
after exploring the south.
Clinic Keo Ou Done (Traditional Medicine Hospice;
%251 895, 020-5543 1115; h9am-9pm, sauna 3-9pm)
This professional and popular massage centre has an
air-con massage room and herbal sauna segregated by
gender. A massage, usually with medicated balms, costs
from 30,000K (body or foot) to 70,000K (aromatherapy)
per hour. Unlimited use of the herbal sauna costs 10,000K.
To get here, take a jumbo east of the Lao–Japanese Bridge.
Turn right at the signpost after about 500m and the clinic
is just a short distance away on the right-hand side.
Dok Champa Massage (%020-7743 9278; Th 5;
h9am-10pm, sauna 3-9pm) Conveniently located opposite the Pakse Hotel, this is the longest-running massage
emporium in the centre of town. Prices are very reasonable
for the stylish set-up: body massages start at just 35,000K
or 70,000K with oils. Throw caution to the wind and have a
body scrub journey for just 200,000K.
Sleeping
There has been a bit of a building boom in
Pakse and there is now a cluster of higherend hotels on the Mekong riverfront. This is
good news for visitors, as it means plenty of
downward pressure on room rates.
BUDGET
Sabaidy 2 Guesthouse (%/fax 212 992; www.sabaidy
2tour.com; Th 24; dm 25,000K, r 40,000-87,000K; ai) A
long-running budget favourite, the friendly
Sabaidy offers good travel information in
homely surrounds. It can be very busy, so it
is wise to book ahead. Four-bed dorms are a
cheap-as-chips option, or secure some privacy in a room with shared facilities for just
40,000K. Motorbikes are available for rent,
and the guesthouse operates a daily boat to
Champasak and runs a tour of the Bolaven
Plateau.
Sedone River Guesthouse (%212 158; Th 11; s/d
from 50,000/60,000K; a) When it comes to location, this place is certainly hard to beat, with a
lonelyplanet.com
MIDRANGE & TOP END
oHotel Salachampa (%212 273; salachampa@
yahoo.com; Th 14; r US$14-30; a) Set in an attractive
French villa, the rooms in the original building are full of charm and character with high
ceilings, wooden floors and heavy furnishings.
Room 3 has views of the garden and room
4 is an immense suite with space to hold a
conference. With a little more TLC, this would
be the best boutique hotel in town. Cheaper
garden rooms are rather bland by comparison.
Pakse Hotel (%212 131; www.paksehotel.com; Th
5; r incl breakfast US$20-96; aiW) A reliable
French-run hotel in the heart of Pakse, the
cheaper rooms are not such a good deal as
they have no window. Invest in a deluxe for
Mekong River views. All rooms have air-con
and hot water, plus some decorative flourish
in the shape of Lao textiles and tribal arts.
Wi-fi is free in public areas, but charged at
300k per minute in rooms. Breakfast is included in the lobby restaurant, but by night
it is well worth venturing up to Le Panorama
on the rooftop, which offers one of the best
hotel menus in town.
Sang Aroun Hotel (%252 111; sangarounhotel@hot
mail.com; Rte 13; r 135,000-240,000K; aiW) What it
lacks in character, it more than makes up for
in amenities and facilities. Rooms are smart,
modern and include a fast wi-fi connection.
Breakfast is included in some room rates, not
with others.
Champasak Palace Hotel (%212 777; www.cham
pasak-palace-hotel.com; Rte 13; r incl breakfast US$23-200;
ai) No one can miss the vast, wedding-
cake style Champasak Palace, on Rte 13 about
1km east of the town centre. It was originally built as a palace for Chao Boun Oum
na Champasak, the last prince of Champasak
and the prime minister of the Kingdom of
Laos between 1960 and 1962. Boun Oum
started building the palace in 1969, fled to
Paris in 1974 and died soon after. The 115
rooms are good value after extensive renovations in 2004, but it is worth investing in
one of the VIP suites (US$60), which have
parquet floors, ample space and panoramic
views. Rooms in the Sedone building are less
inspiring.
Mekong Paradise Resort (%254 120; mekongpara
dise@yahoo.com; r incl breakfast US$25-40; a) Under
the same ownership as the Hotel Residence
du Champa, this new riverside resort is a
pretty escape from downtown Pakse. Set amid
verdant gardens, most rooms have Mekong
views. The newest rooms were still being
finished during our visit and include breezy
balconies and flat-screen TVs.
Arawan Riverside Hotel (%260 345; www.arawan
hotelpakse.com; r incl breakfast 1500-6000B; aiWs)
The five-star claim in their brochure is a tad
ambitious, but it is one of the smarter establishments in southern Laos. Rooms are
spacious and elegantly decorated, including
the signature elephant on everything from
drawer handles to towels. Facilities include
an inviting pool by the Mekong River. Specials
at 1000B are available during the low season.
Champasak Grand Hotel (% 255 111; www.
champasakgrand.com; r incl breakfast 570,000-1,750,000K;
aiWs) Visible from all over town, this
12-storey giant is a smart new addition to the
SOUTHERN LAOS
riverside setting on the Se Don. However, it’s
a tad lethargic and ageing compared with the
Sabaidy. Air-con rooms start from 60,000K
for a single and include hot water.
Lankham Hotel (%213 314; lankhamhotel@yahoo.
com; Rte 13; r 60,000-120,000K; a) Another popular
spot for backpackers, the centrally located
Lankham doubles as a motorbike rental business and noodle shop. Rooms come in size
small or smaller: fan rooms are a cheap option, but have windows facing the corridor.
Try and bag a larger air-con room at the front.
Lao Chaleun Hotel (%251 333; Th 10; r 70,000130,000K; a) A friendly spot just off the main
drag, this can make for that extra hour of sleep
on a busy morning. Singles are a little cell-like,
but the larger doubles with air-con, satellite
TV and hot water are worth considering. This
is also a reliable place to rent transport.
Royal Pakse Hotel (%410 192; Rte 13; r US$10; a)
Located above Nazim Restaurant, this hotel
has been recently refurbished, so the rooms
are pretty good value given the shininess of
the fixtures and fittings.
Daovieng Hotel 2 (%214 331; Rte 13; r 85,000150,000K; aiW) Before you ask where
Daovieng 1 is (we did), it is out of town on
Rte 13. So forget about that one and make for
this new place with smart rooms, shiny tiles
and free wi-fi.
Saigon Champasak Hotel (%254 181; Rte 13;
r 100,000-120,000K; a) Vietnamese-run, as the
name suggests, this is a convenient base for
anyone taking the Mai Lanh bus to Vietnam,
as it departs from here daily. Don’t be put off
by the old building – the rooms are smart and
sparkling clean.
C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • Pa k s e 271
272 C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • Pa k s e
Pakse hotel scene, despite the somewhat inyer-face exterior. All rooms include Mekong
views and an attractive wooden trim. Free
internet is included, plus there is a kidneyshaped pool and fitness centre, available to
nonguests at 54,000K per day.
Eating
Chowing down with the locals, especially at
breakfast and lunch, is an immersive Lao experience. The restaurant under the Lankham
Hotel and, just across the road, the Mengky
Noodle Shop (Rte 13) are safe and popular places
for noodles and soup. Mengky is justly famous for its duck fǒe breakfasts. Service at
the Lankham can be indifferent to the point
of being rude, but the soups are worth the
struggle. Even better is the spread of local restaurants on Th 46, each one serving something
slightly different; just wander along and take
your pick. The restaurants are open all day.
Just west of the traffic lights, Phay Pailin
Sundry Shop (Rte 13) sells decent khào jįi in the
morning and afternoon. Self-caterers should
head to the market or try Oulayvan Minimart (Rte
13; h7am-10pm), Pakse’s answer to 7-Eleven.
SOUTHERN LAOS
LAO, THAI AND VIETNAMESE
Xuan Mai Restaurant (%213 245; Th 4; mains 13,00030,000K; h6am-midnight) Popular Xuan Mai
serves top-drawer fǒe (15,000K; the chicken
is best), khào pûn (white flour noodles with
sweet-spicy sauce), fruit shakes and even garlic bread. The owners speak a bit of French
and that may explain the ‘gleam cheese’ on the
menu. It’s one of the only places for a late feed.
Ketmany Restaurant (%212 615; Rte 13; mains
15,000-40,000K; h6.30am-9.30pm) A good spot
for authentic Lao and Vietnamese food, the
Ketmany has an air-con interior which provides refuge on a hot day. The menu includes
Western dishes and fry-up breakfasts.
Champady (%030-534 8999; mains 15,000-40,000K;
h7am-9pm) Popular with locals and visitors
alike, the Champady has an extensive menu
of Thai and Laotian dishes. Set in a Frenchera building, it’s also a friendly spot to sip on
some Dao Coffee from the Bolaven Plateau.
Khem Khong Restaurant (%213 240; Th 11; mains
15,000-60,000K; h11am-10pm) Located just south
of town on the Mekong, this is one of several
floating restaurants and has a deserved reputation for excellent seafood. Go in a group so
you can share several dishes, especially the
pîng pąa (grilled fish). It also serves Beerlao
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in 3L towers, but beware the gentle rocking
of the restaurant on a windy night, as you’ll
feel like a drunken sailor.
WESTERN, INDIAN AND MORE
Delta Coffee (%030-534 5895; Rte 13; mains 20,00050,000K; h7am-10pm) Delta does a lot more than
‘Coffee’ suggests, including a hearty selection of Italian and Thai dishes. The lasagne,
pasta and pizzas are strongly recommended,
particularly if you’ve been on a steady diet of
sticky rice in the boonies. Owners Alan and
Siriporn serve some of the best coffee in town
from their plantation near Paksong and raise
money to build schools for the children of
plantation workers.
Pizza Boy (%212 982; Rte 13; mains 20,000-54,000K;
h7am-10pm) Formerly Van Pisa, this little traveller cafe offers good-value pizzas, some tasty
pastas and a smattering of Lao and Thai fare.
Sinouk Coffee Shop (%212 552; cnr Th 9 & Th 11;
h7am-7pm) In a renovated French shophouse
this cafe is best-known for its coffee, sold both
in the cup and by the bag. The menu includes
designer coffees like mocha banana liquor or
ice latte peppermint. Snacks include moist
croissants and pain au chocolat daily, plus
less-exciting hot dogs and fries.
Restaurant Na Dao (%255 558; Th 38, opposite Talat
Dao Heuang; mains 30,000-180,000K; h11am-11pm) Fine
French dining has arrived in Pakse. Exiled
from Vientiane, the family has migrated south
to bring their cultured cuisine to southern
Laos. Moreish moments include a salmon
and sea bass carpaccio, Paksong goose with
olives and a five-course menu degustation
for 185,000K.
If it’s the taste of India you crave, then
you’re in luck, as downtown Pakse boasts
two restaurants almost opposite each other.
Jasmine Restaurant (%251 002; Rte 13; mains 15,00050,000K; h7am-10pm) is the original and serves
a good selection from the subcontinent, including tikka dishes and extensive vegetarian
offerings. Nazim Restaurant (%410 192; Rte 13; mains
15,000-50,000K; h7am-10pm) recently relocated
across the road, easing the tensions between
former partners, and has a similar menu of
northern Indian cuisine.
Drinking
The rooftop bar at the Pakse Hotel is a nice
stop for a sunset Beerlao or two. For more
of a local touch, check out the riverside bars
along the Mekong, to the north of the Khem
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Khong Restaurant. Plastic chairs, fairy lights
and oodles of cold Beerlao make for a Lao
night out.
The popular grungy haunt of Lotty recently
reopened as Holiday Champa (Th 11; h7am-11pm),
with a beer garden out front, but it remains to
be seen if it will recapture its old form.
As the night unfolds, most locals head to
Victory Hi Tech, a small nightclub on the new
ring road. It is loud and dark and not exactly
Vientiane, but it does stay open until, wait for
it, 11.30pm. The nearby Victory Beer Garden is a
more relaxed open-air place showing regular
football (soccer to our American friends).
Getting There & Away
C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • Pa k s e 273
of town. When buying bus tickets at any of
Pakse’s bus stations, ensure you buy the ticket
from the ticket counter or the bus driver and
not from any intermediaries out to make some
quick kip.
Mai Linh Express (%254 149, 0592-211 211 in
Vietnam) operates a daily minibus connecting
Pakse with Kontum (118,000K) in Vietnam’s
Central Highlands. It travels via Paksong
(15,000K), Sekong (34,000K), Attapeu
(57,000K) and Ngoc Hoi (108,000K) on the
Ho Chi Minh Highway. It departs at 7am
from the Saigon Champasak Hotel (p271)
in Pakse and arrives in Kontum around
3.30pm. For more information on crossing
into Vietnam this way see p310.
AIR
Pakse Airport has several domestic flight connections, including daily services to Vientiane
(US$118) and several flights per week to
Luang Prabang (US$155). There are also international flights to Siem Reap (US$119) and
Bangkok (US$132), with several services per
week. Be sure to check at the Lao Airlines office
(%212 252; www.laos-airlines.com; Th 11; h8-11.30am &
1.30-4.30pm Mon-Fri) a day or two before.
The airport is 3km northwest of town and
has a BCEL exchange office. A jumbo to the
airport should cost about 20,000K.
BOAT
The VIP Bus Station (%212 228; off Rte 13), also
known as the Evening Market Bus Station or
Km 2 Bus Station, is where most VIP buses
to Vientiane (150,000-190,000K, eight to 10
hours, 677km) originate, though they also
usually stop in town, around the Lankham
Hotel and at the bus offices next to the Se
Don. It’s possible to take these buses to Seno
(for Savannakhet) and Tha Khaek, but the
arrival times are pretty unfriendly and you
have to pay the full fare. Tickets for the various
VIP buses are available in guesthouses, hotels
and restaurants all over town; just ask where
you need to be when the bus is leaving. This
bus station includes the inviting KVT Coffee
with air-conditioning and internet access for
8000K per hour.
The other service departing from here is
the handy Thai–Lao International Bus; see
p274 for details.
Dao Heung Market (Morning Market)
Buses and sǎwngthǎew leave the sǎwngthǎew
farm at the edge of the Dao Heung Market for
Champasak (20,000K, one to two hours, if you
have to wait for a ferry) and for Ban Saphai
(8000K, 40 minutes) regularly between about
6.30am and 3pm.
BUS & SǍWNGTHǍEW
Pakse has several bus and sǎwngthǎew terminals. Most guesthouses and hotels offer
tickets to the islands of Si Phan Don, including
the boat transfer. Prices are usually around
50,000K to Don Khong and 60,000/70,000K
to Don Det/Don Khon. This is a convenient,
if slightly more expensive option than the
local bus, as you get picked up in the centre
Northern Bus Terminal
At the northern terminal (%251 508), usually
called khíw lot lák jét (Km 7 bus terminal),
7km north of town on Rte 13, you’ll find a
steady procession of agonisingly slow normal
buses (without air-con) heading north. Every
50 minutes or so between 6.30am and 4.30pm
a slow bus starts the long haul to Savannakhet
SOUTHERN LAOS
Like so many others, the public boat from
Pakse to Champasak and Don Khong has
stopped operating, unable to compete with
soaring fuel prices and sǎwngthǎew that do
the trip in half the time for less money. Any
chance of a recovery has evaporated with the
new road to Champasak, running along the
west bank of the Mekong.
Sabaidy 2 Guesthouse (p270) operates a
daily boat to Champasak for those that like
life on the water. It costs 65,000K per person
and leaves at 8am. It is slightly slower (and a
bit more expensive) than taking the new road,
but infinitely more relaxing.
VIP Bus Station
274 C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • Pa k s e
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CROSSING THE THAI BORDER AT CHONG MEK & VANG TAO
SOUTHERN LAOS
The Vang Tao (Laos)/Chong Mek (Thailand) crossing (h5am-6pm) is the busiest in southern
Laos. From Pakse, sǎwngthǎew (10,000K, 75 minutes, 44km) – and some of the most battered
taxis (20,000K per person or 120,000K for a charter, 45 minutes) you’re ever likely to see – run
between Talat Dao Heuang (New Market) and Vang Tao. When your transport stops, walk about
300m up to the green-roofed building, where you’ll be stamped out. Immigration is also here,
plus an exchange office offering criminally low rates.
Walk through the throngs of traders and small-time smugglers loitering around the border, then
another 100m or so to Thai immigration, located in a startling building that looks vaguely like a
plate full of purple nachos minus the guacamole. They’ll process your entry in short order. Taxi
drivers usually wait outside immigration and want about B900 to B1200 for a whole air-con van
to Ubon Ratchatani (one hour, 82km). The cheaper option is to walk to the end of the stall-lined
street and find a sǎwngthǎew (40B, one hour) to Phibun Mangsahan. It will drop you at a point
where another sǎwngthǎew will soon pick you up for the trip to Ubon (40B, one hour, 40km).
Much less stressful is the Thai–Lao International Bus (55,000K, 2½ to three hours, 126km)
direct between Pakse and Ubon. Buses leave Pakse at 8.30am and 3.30pm, and run from Ubon’s
main bus station at 7.30am and 3.30pm. It is also possible to buy through tickets from Pakse
to Bangkok (200,000K, 14 hours), departing at 3.30pm daily or a combination bus/sleeper train
ticket to the Thai capital (280,000K), also departing at 3.30pm.
(35,000K, four to five hours, 277km), Tha
Khaek (50,000K, eight to nine hours), and, for
those of you with plenty of time, no money
and a major masochistic streak, Vientiane
(100,000K, 16 to 18 hours). The durations of
these journeys are very flexible and depend
on how long the bus stops in Savannakhet.
There are also a few international bus
services from here, although journey times
are interminably long. Daily services leave
for Lao Bao (6am, 100,000K), Hue (6.30am,
150,000K) and Danang (7am, 180,000K).
These ‘direct’ services usually involve one or
two changes along the way, so it makes much
more sense to break the journey if you have
the time.
For details about buses to Pakse from
Vientiane, see p114.
Southern Bus Terminal
For transport anywhere south or east, head to
the southern terminal (khíw lot lák pąet or ‘Km
8 bus terminal’), south of town on Rte 13. The
transport might be a bus, but it could just as
easily be a sǎwngthǎew. For Si Phan Don,
there are regular departures for Muang Khong
(35,000K including ferry, three hours, 120km)
between 7am and 3pm and Ban Nakasang
(30,000K, three to four hours) for Don Det
and Don Khon. More comfortable are the
Cambodian bus companies running international services to Phnom Penh that can
drop travellers at Don Khong or Don Det/
Don Khon. Tickets cost 55,000K including
the boat transfer. These buses also offer tickets to Stung Treng (120,000K, five hours),
60km south of the border in Cambodia. One
sǎwngthǎew runs to Kiet Ngong and Ban
Phapho (25,000K, two hours or so), leaving
around 12 noon.
Regular transport to the Bolaven Plateau
leaves for Paksong (15,000K, 90 minutes),
stopping at Tat Fan if you ask. Transport to
Salavan (25,000K, three to four hours, 115km)
leaves regularly until around 2pm and can
drop you at Tat Lo. Buses to Sekong (30,000K,
four hours, 135km) leave hourly between 7am
and 11am and continue to Attapeu (40,000K,
five to six hours, 212km).
Getting Around
Using any of Pakse’s local transport on a
shared basis costs between 3000K and 8000K,
but as a foreigner you will need to bargain
a bit to avoid being overcharged. A ride to
either bus terminal costs about 5000K. For
charter, the standard fares to the bus stations
are 20,000K (sǎam-lâaw) or 30,000K (jumbo
or tuk-tuk).
Several shops and guesthouses rent bicycles, usually for around 10,000K per
day. Motorbikes are also readily available
through popular budget guesthouses, including Sabaidy 2 Guesthouse, Lankham
Hotel and Lao Chaleun Hotel. Prices start
at about 60,000K for smaller bikes, rising to
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80,000K for more powerful 120cc bikes. The
Lankham Hotel has 250cc dirt bikes available for 210,000K per day if you rent for a
week, perfect for tackling some of the trails on
the Bolaven Plateau or remote roads beyond
Attapeu, Sekong or Salavan.
AROUND PAKSE
Don Kho & Ban Saphai
small Tourist Information Centre near the boat
pier in Ban Saphai speak some English and
can phone ahead to arrange a bed. This is
part of the Ban Saphai Handicraft Centre,
where there are a couple of stalls selling local
weaving.
A couple of villagers speak enough English
to arrange the homestays, guided tours of the
island (50,000K per day, one to four people),
Lao-style fishing trips (25,000K for a half day)
and even lessons in silk weaving (50,000K
per day, plus thread). We have heard of one
woman who spent four days ‘homestaying’
and learning to weave.
GETTING THERE & AWAY
Sǎwngthǎew to Ban Saphai (8000K, 45 minutes) leave fairly regularly from Pakse’s Dao
Heung Market (Morning Market; p273), or
hire a tuk-tuk or sǎam-lâaw for about 60,000K
one way. From Ban Saphai to Don Kho boats
cost 20,000K for one to five people. A boat
tour around Don Kho costs 70,000K.
Phu Xieng Thong NPA
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Although the majority of the 1200-sq-km
Phu Xieng Thong NPA (www.ecotourismlaos.com) lies
in Salavan Province, its most accessible areas
are about 50km upriver from Pakse. The area
features scrub, mixed monsoon deciduous
forest and exposed sandstone ridges and cavelike outcroppings, some of which contain prehistoric paintings. On the Thai side of the
Mekong is Pha Taem National Park.
The Phu Xieng Thong NPA is home to a
range of wildlife, including important concentrations of banteng, green peafowl and
clouded leopard. Elephant, Douc langur, gibbon, Asiatic black bear and tiger might also
pass through, but it is unlikely that visitors
will see any of these. If the season is right
you’re much more likely to see some striking
wild orchids.
The best way into Phu Xieng Thong NPA
is on a two- or three-day community-based
trek beginning in the Mekong village of Ban
Singsamphan. The trip involves river transport, a homestay in Ban Singsamphan and
a trek over historically important Phu Khong
(Khong Mountain). It’s best to start the four
to five-hour trek early, as it can get pretty
warm. Parts of the trek cross exposed rock
outcroppings that allegedly resemble a turtle
and a fish basket and provide a backdrop to
SOUTHERN LAOS
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The Mekong island of Don Kho and the
nearby village of Ban Saphai, about 15km
north of Pakse, are famous for their silk
weaving. Women can be seen working on
large looms underneath their homes producing distinctive silk and cotton phàa salóng,
long sarongs for men, and are happy to let
you watch.
Like Don Daeng further south, there are
no cars on Don Kho and despite the advent
of electricity it’s easy to feel like you’re stepping back to a more simple time. The 300
or so residents live in villages at either side
of the 800m-wide island and farm rice in
the centre. Believe it or not, Don Kho was
briefly the capital of southern Laos following
the French arrival in the 1890s, and it later
served as a mooring point for boats steaming
between Don Det and Savannakhet. These
days, however, the only real sight is Wat Don
Kho, which has some French-era buildings and
an impressive drum tower. In the southeast
corner of the grounds is a soaring tree that
locals say is 500 years old, though 200 seems
more realistic. These trees periodically have
fires burned inside the trunks to extract a resin
used to seal local boats.
The villages of Don Kho are some of the
best places to experience a homestay (see the
boxed text, p45) in southern Laos. Just turn
up on the island and say ‘homestay’ and the
villagers will sort you out. A homestay costs
30,000K per bed, with a maximum two people
per house. Meals are taken with the host family and cost 20,000K. In our experience, the
food is delicious.
If a homestay doesn’t sound like your thing
there’s a community guesthouse at the edge of
the sacred forest on the far side of the island.
Bed and meal rates are the same as a homestay, and villagers will help you make a small
offering to the forest spirit to smooth your
stay. Just say ‘guesthouse’ when you turn up
and someone will lead you there (it’s about
a 700m walk). Alternatively, the guys in the
C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • A r o u n d Pa k s e 275
276 C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • C h a m p a s a k
CHAMPASAK
A
B
SLEEPING i
Dokchampa Guest House &
Restaurant .....................................4
Khamphouy Guest House ...........5
Saythong Guest House &
Restaurant .....................................6
Siamephone Hotel .........................7
Thavisab Guesthouse....................8
B3
A3
A3
A3
B1
EATING @
Frice & Lujane Restaurant............9 B2
TRANSPORT
Boats to Don Daeng ...................10 B3
Police
Z
#
Unfinished
Palace
3
6
"3
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"
Public
Administration Post 4
"
Offices
Office i
#
22
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o ng
2
To Anouxa
Guesthouse &
INFORMATION
Restaurant (500m);
Champasak District Visitor
Champasak Spa (500m);
Ban
Phaphin
(1km)
Information Centre ....................1 B3
Lao Development Bank................2 A3
SIGHTS & ACTIVITIES
Wat Nyutthitham (Wat
Thong) ............................................3 A3
Information
The Lao Development Bank (h8.30am-3.30pm
Mon-Fri) changes cash and travellers cheques.
To Pakse (30km)
100 m
0.05 miles
Rive
r
1
0
0
‚
It’s hard to imagine Champasak as a seat of
royalty, but until only 30 years ago it was
just that. These days the town is a somnolent
place, the fountain circle in the middle of the
main street alluding to a grandeur long since
departed with the former royal family. The
remaining French colonial-era buildings, including one that once belonged to Chao Boun
Oum na Champasak and another to his father
Chao Ratsadanai, share space with traditional
Lao wooden houses. The few vehicles that
venture down the narrow main street share
it with buffaloes and cows who seem relaxed
even by Lao standards. It’s easy to spend a
couple of days here.
The Angkor-period ruins of Wat Phu
Champasak (p278) lie 8km southwest
of town and are the main attraction, as
Champasak has the only accommodation
in the immediate vicinity of Wat Phu. The
town also acts as a jumping-off point for Don
Daeng (p281).
Just about everything in Champasak is
spread along the one riverside street, either
side of the fountain circle.
‚
SOUTHERN LAOS
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Sights & Activities
Champasak has a couple of mildly interesting
temples. On a dirt road parallel to the main
north–south street is the late 19th-century Wat
Nyutthitham, more commonly known as Wat
Thong. An old sǐm features an arched and
colonnaded verandah, and has a washed pastel
stucco relief on the front. This was the wat
‚‚
CHAMPASAK
It is US$2 per cheque if you want dollars, no
charge for kip.
The Champasak District Visitor Information
Centre (% 020-220 6215; h 8am-4.30pm MonFri) should be your first point of call in
Champasak. It has well-presented displays
with information about the town, Wat Phu,
Um Tomo and Don Daeng, and can arrange
boats to Don Daeng and a bed in the guesthouse there. Local guides, some of whom
speak English, lead day walks around Wat
Phu and the ancient city, and to Um Tomo.
Guides charge 40,000/80,000K for a half/full
day, irrespective of numbers.
Internet Nam Oly (per hr 12,000K; h7am-6pm),
about 150m south of the Inthira Hotel, has
public internet access.
#
Stairs to
#̀
Boat Landing
Fountain
D
" 10To Souchitra Guesthouse &
Circle H
#
i
"
Restaurant (70m); Vong Paseud
1
7
Guest House & Restaurant (500m);
Inthira Hotel (500m);
Internet Nam Oly (650m); Wat
Phuthawanaram (Wat Muang Kang)
" i
" (8km); Phimphone Guesthouse (9km);
5i
6
Wat Phu Champasak (9km);
Ban Don Talat (15km)
‚
mysterious archaeological ruins and amazing
views. More enjoyable is the two-hour walk
through beautiful forest, with the possibility
of a lunch stop with some hermit nuns. The
nuns lives in a cave underneath the dramatic
Pa Peung (Bee Cliff) and have forsaken speaking and many foods for several years, all in the
name of world peace. Bizarre, yes, but their
dedication is quite inspirational if not yet successful on the international stage. The two-day
trip finishes after the trek but we recommend
the three-day version, which heads downriver
to Don Kho for a homestay there.
Limited transport means it is possible but
difficult to reach Ban Singsamphan independently – if you’re interested, get the lowdown from the Provincial Tourism Office
in Pakse (p268). A boat from Ban Saphai to
Ban Singsamphan costs 350,000K. A slightly
cheaper route involves road transport to Ban
Buang Kha and a boat from there to Ban
Singsamphan (200,000K).
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used by Champasak’s royal family, and the
thâat kádųuk here contain the ashes of King
Nyutthitham (died 1885), Chao Ratsadanai
(died 1946) and Chao Boun Oum (died 1975),
among other royalty.
About 8km south of town on the Mekong
stands the oldest active temple in Champasak,
Wat Phuthawanaram, more popularly known as
Wat Muang Kang. Like the sǐm at Wat Thong,
the intriguing hǎw tąi (Tripitaka library) at
Wat Muang Kang combines elements of
French-colonial and Lao Buddhist architecture. The three-tiered roofs of the sǐm and hǎw
tąi have coloured mosaics at the corners, and
a small box with coloured crystal windows at
the centre of the top roof ridge, reminiscent
of Burmese architecture.
Ostensibly these crystal-sided boxes hold
Buddha images, but local legend ascribes a
more magical purpose to the one atop the
hǎw tąi. Supposedly at a certain moment in
the annual lunar calendar (most say it’s during the Wat Phu Festival), in the middle of
the night, a mystic light beam comes from
across the river, bounces through the kâew
(crystal) and alights atop Sri Lingaparvata, the
holy mountain above Wat Phu Champasak.
You can reach Wat Muang Kang by boat
from Champasak, or come by bike on the narrow dirt road along the riverbank. You could
combine a boat trip to Wat Muang Kang with
a visit to Uo Moung (p282).
After exploring the region, treat yourself
to a round of pampering at the Champasak Spa
house on the riverbank, treatments include
a foot massage (45,000K), body massage
(45,000K), oil massage (80,000K) and a herbal
massage with a hot compress (70,000K).
Service is superb and the atmosphere very
calming, very much the international spa experience at local prices. Relax in a riverside
sala after the massage with some herbal tea
and fruit. It’s almost as essential as a visit
to Wat Phu and is also a good cause as it
creates local jobs to allow women to stay in
Champasak rather than migrate to the city.
Sleeping & Eating
Finding a room in Champasak is straightforward enough except during the Wat Phu
Champasak Festival (Magha Puja; usually
in February, see p281), when you can sleep
on the grounds of Wat Phu Champasak. If
you do this, ask at one of the food tents for
a safe spot and take particular care of your
valuables. Accommodation, ranging from the
basic (homestay) to the luxurious is available
all year-round on nearby Don Daeng.
The restaurants in the following guesthouses are open for breakfast, lunch and
dinner.
Vong Paseud Guest House (%920 038; r US$2-15;
a) Long a popular choice with backpackers
thanks to the English- and French-speaking
owners, attractively located riverside restaurant and free lift from the ferry. The original
rooms are bare bones with just a fan, bathroom and paper-thin walls, but the newer
air-con rooms are more substantial. The
restaurant comes with river breezes and
serves better-than-average travellers’ fare.
Motorbikes and bicycles are available for
rent. It is located near the Inthira Hotel, about
600m south of the fountain circle.
Saythong Guest House & Restaurant (%030-534
6603; r 30,000K) One of the first guesthouses in
town, Mr Sing’s place remains resolutely
basic while all those around it upgrade. The
Saythong is cheap, but a little musty. The restaurant (mains 15,000k to 30,000k) has one of
the best locations in town.
Phimphone Guesthouse (%020-227 4218; r 30,000K)
This offers the closest beds to Wat Phu – it’s
just a few hundred metres from the entrance
booth. The rooms are pretty basic but include an attached bathroom, and the family
are friendly.
Khamphouy Guest House (%252 700; r 30,00040,000K) Just south of the circle, the simple
rooms with hot-water bathrooms and overhead fans are a good choice. New beds were
under construction during our visit, so expect
a decent night’s sleep.
Dokchampa Guest House and Restaurant (%0205535 0910; r 40,000-150,000K; a). The Dokchampa
has undergone a serious facelift in recent years
and the rooms are now some of the smartest
at this price range. Try to bag room 6 for river
views. Air-conditioned bungalows start from
100,000K and include spiffy bathrooms and
satellite TV.
Souchitra Guesthouse (%920 059; r 50,000-150,000K;
a) These clean and comfortable rooms are
a good deal if you opt for a fan, but not quite
such a steal if you turn on the air-con. The
spacious common verandah, riverside hammocks and restaurant are all good places to
chill out.
SOUTHERN LAOS
(%020-5649 9739; www.champasak-spa.com; h10ammidday & 1-7pm). Set in a traditional wooden
C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • C h a m p a s a k 277
278 C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • W a t P h u C h a m p a s a k
SOUTHERN LAOS
Anouxa Guesthouse (%213 272; r 100,000-150,000K;
a) Arguably the pick of the guesthouses, the
friendly Anouxa offers some of the most appealing bungalows in Champasak. The airconditioned bungalows that face the river are
well-worth the money at 120,000K as they
are spacious and smart. It’s a bit of a hike
from the middle of the action, but come on,
there isn’t that much action in Champasak,
so who’s complaining? The attached riverside restaurant (mains 15,000K to 30,000K)
serves a tasty mok pa (fish curry in banana
leaf).
oInthira Hotel (%214 059; www.inthirahotel.
com; r US$60; aiW) The classy Inthira brings
a whole new experience to the Champasak
accommodation scene. Set in a converted old
shophouse, the rooms are tasteful in the extreme. Choose from split-level duplex suites
with terrazzo bathtubs, flat-screen TVs and
a double balcony or Lao-style garden houses
with plenty of space and a Balinese-style alfresco rain shower. Mmmm, very nice indeed.
The restaurant is one of the best in town,
borrowing liberally from the menu of the
Kop Chai Deu Restaurant in Vientiane, as
it is also part of the Green Discovery family. Prices are reasonable from 15,000K to
45,000K or just wade into the Lao Discovery
Menu at 69,000K, including a shot of lào-láo
(rice whisky).
Frice & Lujane Restaurant (%920 096; mains 40,00060,000K) An unlikely find in Champasak, this
Italian trattoria has a small menu of authentic
dishes based on 19th-century family recipes.
Try gnocchi, pasta or lasagne washed down
with a glass of vino.
Other sleeping options:
Siamephone Hotel (%920 128; r 150,000K; a)
Probably the biggest hotel in town, with smart, clean
rooms, but not a lot in the atmosphere department.
Thavisab Guesthouse (%920 081; r 50,000-150,000K;
a) Long-running guesthouse with large rooms including
TV and hot water.
Getting There & Away
The big news is that Champasak is now connected to Pakse by a new road running along
the west bank of the Mekong. It was still under
construction at the time of writing, so some
vehicles use it and others don’t, but eventually it will cut the distance to 28km and the
journey time to less than one hour. Buses and
sǎwngthǎew from Pakse leave throughout the
day until about 3pm; see p273.
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Ferries (2000K per person, 7000K for
motorbikes) from Ban Muang on the eastern
side of the Mekong to Ban Phaphin (1.8km
north of Champasak) on the western side
run regularly during daylight hours, and 24
hours a day during the Wat Phu Champasak
Festival. Travel from Ban Phaphin to
Champasak by any vehicle is about 2000K
per person, more like 15,000K to charter.
Leaving Champasak, sǎwngthǎew and
buses depart for Pakse (20,000K) until about
3.30pm, with early morning the busiest.
Going south, get to Ban Lak 30 on Rte 13
and hail anything going past.
Getting Around
Bicycles (10,000K per day) and motorbikes
(50,000/80,000K per half/full day) can be
rented at most guesthouses.
WAT PHU CHAMPASAK
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The ancient Khmer religious complex of Wat
Phu (admission 30,000K, children 12 & under free; h8am4.30pm) is one of the highlights of any trip
to Laos. Stretching 1400m up to the slopes
of the Phu Pasak range (also known more
colloquially as Phu Khuai or Mt Penis),
Wat Phu is small compared with the monumental Angkor-era sites near Siem Reap in
Cambodia. However, you know the old adage
about location, location, location and the
tumbledown pavilions, ornate Shiva-lingam
sanctuary, enigmatic crocodile stone and tall
trees that shroud much of the site in soothing
shade add up to give Wat Phu an almost mystical atmosphere. These, and a layout that is
unique in Khmer architecture, led to Unesco
declaring the Wat Phu complex a World
Heritage Site in 2001.
Sanskrit inscriptions and Chinese sources
confirm the site has been a place of worship since the mid 5th century. The temple
complex was designed as a worldly imitation
of heaven and fitted into a larger plan that
evolved to include a network of roads, cities,
settlement and other temples. What you see
today is the product of centuries of building,
rebuilding, alteration and addition, with the
most recent structures dating from the lateAngkorian period.
At its height, the temple and nearby city
formed the most important economic and
political centre in the region. But despite
its historic importance, the 84-hectare site
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WAT PHU CHAMPASAK
MIDDLE LEVEL
Sandstone Khmer pavilions
with fine sculpture and reliefs,
parts of which may date back
to the 6th century
UPPER LEVEL
The main temple sanctuary,
which once featured a lingam
bathed from the spring (still
considered sacred) above
Meditation Cella
Crocodile
Stone
LOWER LEVEL
Entrance to the temple complex
was via this long causeway
promenade, flanked either side
by ceremonial barays (ponds)
Elephant
Stone
Buddha
Footprint
Yoni & Broken
Shiva-lingam Khmer-era Dvarapalas
Sanctuary Dvarapala
Galleries Quadrangular
Pavilions
Trimurti
Spring
200 m
0.1 mile
Gopura
(gate)
Former Baray
(Partly Dry Pond)
Processional Causeway
Baray
Former Baray
(Partly Dry Pond)
Nandi
Hall
Foundations of Gopura
(Ornamental Entranceway
The Archaeological Site
Wat Phu is situated at the junction of the
Mekong plain and Phu Phasak, a mountain
that was sacred to local peoples centuries before the construction of any of the ruins now
visible. The original Austro-Asiatic tribes living in this area undoubtedly paid respect to
animist spirits associated with the mountain
and its rock shelter spring.
The archaeological site itself is divided into
six terraces on three main levels joined by a
long, stepped promenade flanked by statues
of lions and naga.
LOWER LEVEL
A modern sala built by Chao Boun Oum in
the 1960s stood at the western side of the great
baray (ceremonial pond; nǎwng sá in Lao)
until it was recently dismantled, revealing the
sandstone base of the ancient main entrance.
From here begins a causeway-style ceremonial
promenade, flanked by two baray. Parts of
both the northern and southern baray still fill
with water, lotus flowers and the odd buffalo
during the wet season and the site is in better
shape since the stone lotus buds lining the
promenade have been re-erected.
MIDDLE LEVEL
The middle section features two exquisitely
carved quadrangular pavilions built of sandstone
and laterite. Believed to date from the mid
10th or early 11th century, the style resembles
Koh Ker in Cambodia. Some people (but not
the Unesco experts) suggest these pavilions
SOUTHERN LAOS
remains in considerable danger from the elements. Detailed studies reveal that water
erosion is pressuring the site and without
a systematic water-management plan the
buildings will eventually collapse. Italianand Japanese-funded projects have helped
stabilise the southern of two ancient canals
built to channel water away from the central
structures. However, the equally important
northern canal has collapsed completely,
resulting in a slow but steady destruction
of the northern side of the site. To see it,
compare the relatively intact terraced steps
and pavilions on the south of the site with
those on the north.
Years of work by the Italian Archaeological
Mission and the inimitable Dr Patrizia Zolese,
the leading expert on Wat Phu who has been
working at the site since 1990, have resulted
in the first detailed map of the site and surrounding 400 sq km, revealing much about
the way the ancients lived. During the last
few years, archaeologists have restored the
ceremonial causeway, replacing slabs and reerecting stone lotus buds that had been scattered across the site. Restoration of the Nandi
Hall has recently been completed.
Don’t miss the museum (admission with Wat
Phu ticket; h8am-4.30pm) beside the ticket office. Extensive cataloguing work has recently
been completed on the dozens of lintels, naga
(mythical water serpents), Buddhas and other
stone work from Wat Phu and its associated
sites. Descriptions are in English, plus the
building includes clean bathrooms.
To Ticket Booth;
Museum (500m)
280 C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • W a t P h u C h a m p a s a k
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CHAMPASAK IN ANTIQUITY
SOUTHERN LAOS
Under the palm trees and rice paddies 4km south of Champasak town is the remains of a city
that was, about 1500 years ago, the capital of the Mon-Khmer Chenla kingdom. The site is known
today as Muang Kao (Old City), but scholars believe it was called Shrestapura.
Aerial photographs show the remains of a rectangular city measuring 2.3km by 1.8km, surrounded by double earthen walls on three sides and protected on the east by the Mekong River.
Other traces of the old city include small baray (a Khmer word meaning ‘pond’, usually used for
ritual purposes), the foundations for circular brick monuments, evidence of an advanced system
of irrigation, various Hindu statuary and stone carvings (including a lintel in the style of 7thcentury Sambor Prei Kuk), stone implements and ceramics. The sum of all this is an extremely
rare example of an ancient urban settlement in Southeast Asia, one whose design reveals how
important religious belief was in the workings of everyday life.
The origin of the city remained a mystery until Southeast Asia’s oldest Sanskrit inscription was
discovered here. The 5th-century stele stated the city was founded by King Devanika and was
called Kuruksetra and also mentions the auspicious Sri Lingaparvata nearby, a clear reference to
the mountain near Wat Phu Champasak. ‘Honoured since antiquity’, the mountain was believed
to be the residence or the manifestation of the Hindu god Shiva, and even today local people
honour the mountain as the place of Phi Intha (the soul or protecting spirit of the mountain).
By the end of the 5th century the city was thriving. It continued as a major regional centre
until at least the 7th century, as showed by two Nandi pedestal (Shiva’s bull mount) sculptures
discovered in 1994-95 bearing inscriptions by King Citrasena-Mahendravarman, the ‘conqueror’
who later shifted the kingdom’s capital to Sambor Prei Kuk in northeast Cambodia. Archaeological
material suggests the city was inhabited until the 16th century.
Ongoing research by Dr Patrizia Zolese and her team has revealed that a second city was built
near Wat Phu after the 9th century. She believes the Ho Nang Sida (see p281) was at the centre
of this city, which was probably Lingapura, a place mentioned in many ancient inscriptions but
which has not been categorically identified by modern scholars.
were used for gender-segregated worship and
they are sometimes called ‘lady pavilion’ and
‘man pavilion’.
Wat Phu was converted into a Buddhist
site in later centuries but much of the original
Hindu sculpture remains in the lintels, which
feature various forms of Vishnu and Shiva. Over
the western pediment of the north pavilion is
a relief of Shiva and Parvati sitting on Nandi,
Shiva’s bull mount. The building consists of
four galleries and a central open courtyard,
although entry is forbidden for safety reasons.
Just behind the southern pavilion stands
a smaller building known as the Nandi Hall
(dedicated to Shiva’s mount) and two collapsed galleries flanking a set of laterite steps
leading to the next level. From the Nandi Hall
an ancient royal road once led south for about
1.3km to Ho Nang Sida (p281), and eventually
to Angkor Wat in Cambodia. Six ruined brick
shrines – only their bases remain – separate
the lower two levels from the final and holiest level. Roots and mosses hold the bricks
together in some places, and drive them apart
in others.
An impressive dvarapala (sentinel figure)
stands ramrod straight with sword held at
the ready near what was once a gopura (ornate entranceway). If you step down off the
walkway and onto the grassy area just north
of here you’ll come to the remains of a yoni
pedestal, the cosmic vagina-womb symbol associated with Shaivism. Very near the yoni
lie two unusually large, headless and armless
dvarapala statues half-buried in the grass. These
are the largest dvarapala found anywhere in
the former Angkorian kingdom.
A steep naga stairway leads onwards to the
sanctuary and probably dates from the 11th
century. It is lined with dàwk jąmpąa (plumeria or frangipani), the Lao national tree.
UPPER LEVEL
On the uppermost level is the sanctuary
itself, which once enclosed a Shiva lingam
that was bathed – via a system of sandstone
pipes – with waters from the sacred spring
above and behind the complex. A lintel inside
the southern entrance depicts the story of
Krishnavatara in which Krishna kills his uncle
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Kamsa. The sanctuary now contains a set of
unsophisticated-looking Buddha images on
an altar. The brick rear section, which might
have been built in the 9th century, is a cella
(cell), where the holy linga was kept.
Sculpted into a large boulder behind the
main sanctuary is a Khmer-style Trimurti,
the Hindu holy trinity of Shiva, Vishnu and
Brahma. Further back, beyond some terracing, is the cave from which the holy spring
flowed into the sanctuary.
East of the sanctuary and a newer wat
building, a winding path leads north to the
so-called crocodile stone, a boulder with a deep,
highly stylised impression of a croc believed to
date from the Angkor period. Crocodiles were
semidivine figures in Khmer culture, but despite much speculation that the sculpture was
used for human sacrifices its function, if there
was one, remains unknown. Further along the
same path is the elephant stone, a huge boulder
bearing the likeness of an elephant thought to
date from the 16th century. Nearby you can
see remains of a stone meditation cella.
When you’ve seen everything here, just
sitting and soaking up the wide-angle view
of the baray, the plains and the Mekong is
fantastic, especially in the morning before
the crowds arrive.
Other Sites Associated with Wat Phu
Lopburi. No doubt symbolic of the Hindu
Trimurti of Shiva, Brahma and Vishnu, the
towers are believed to date from the 11th century and were likely never completed; they are
in poor condition. A large, dried-up baray can
be seen nearby. Ban That can be reached by
jumbo from Champasak or Ban Thong Khop.
Festivals
The highlight of the year in Champasak is the
three-day Bun Wat Phu Champasak (Wat
Phu Champasak Festival), held as part of
Magha Puja (Makha Busa) during the full
moon of the third lunar month, usually in
February. The central ceremonies performed
are Buddhist, culminating on the full-moon
day with an early-morning parade of monks
receiving alms from the faithful, followed that
evening by a candlelit wíen thíen (circumambulation) of the lower shrines.
Throughout the three days of the festival
Lao visitors climb around the hillside, stopping to pray and leave offerings of flowers and
incense. The festival is more commercial than
it once was, and for much of the time has an
atmosphere somewhere between a kids carnival and music festival. Events include Thai
boxing matches, cockfights, comedy shows
and plenty of music and dancing. Food is
available from vendors who set up along the
road from Ban Thong Khop, and after dark
several areas are cordoned off for open-air
nightclubs featuring bands from as far away as
Vientiane. After dark the beer and lào-láo flow
freely and the atmosphere gets pretty rowdy.
Getting There & Away
Wat Phu Champasak is 46km from Pakse,
12km from Ban Phaphin and 10km
from Champasak. A shared jumbo from
Champasak to Ban Thong Khop, the village
opposite Wat Phu, should cost about 6000K
per person. More likely you’ll have to haggle with a sǎam-lâaw or tuk-tuk driver who
will do the return trip for about 60,000K to
80,000K. Cycling is also popular, but there’s
not much shade so it pays to start early.
DON DAENG
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Stretched out like an old croc sunning itself
in the middle of the Mekong, Don Daeng is a
little like an island that time forgot. It’s classic
middle Mekong, with eight villages scattered
around its edge and rice fields in the middle.
SOUTHERN LAOS
South of Wat Phu are three smaller Angkorera sites in very poor condition that will
mainly interest die-hard fans of Khmer architecture. Each of the three stands beside the
ancient road to Angkor Wat in Cambodia.
An easy 1.3km walk to the south of Wat
Phu – stick to the trail heading south from
the terraced promenade because there may
be some UXO (unexploded ordnance) in the
area – stands Ho Nang Sida. Its exact function
is uncertain, though it probably dates from
the early 10th century and might have been
the central shrine for a second ancient city.
A further kilometre south stands another
rubble pile, Hong Tha Tao (Lord Turtle Room).
This structure, or what’s left of it, resembles
hospitals built during the reign of Khmer King
Jayavarman VII in the early 13th century, so
it might have been there to serve as a hospital
for ill pilgrims.
Another few kilometres on, close to the
village of Ban That, stand three Khmer prasat
(square-based brick stupas) reminiscent of
similar tripartite monuments in Thailand’s
C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • D o n D a e n g 281
SOUTHERN LAOS
282 C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • U o M o u n g ( T o m o Te m p l e )
The small and mostly shaded track that runs
around the edge of the 8km-long island is
mercifully free of cars – bicycles, slow-moving
motorbikes and the odd dok dok (mini tractor) are all the transport that’s required.
The remains of a square-based brick prasat in the centre of the island and another,
hiding under the sǐm at Wat Ban Boung Kham,
suggest the island has been inhabited since
Khmer times, at least. But the attraction of
Don Daeng is more about just soaking up
village life. Walking or cycling around you’ll
find people refreshingly welcoming.
While life on Don Daeng is much as it has
been for decades, the introduction of tourism
will put some pressures on this timeless existence. The village elders told us specifically that
they don’t want Don Daeng to go the way of
Don Det (p289). That means they don’t want
falang openly smoking spliffs or getting overly
amorous in public, and women are asked to
wear sarongs when they bathe, not bikinis;
ditto for sunbathing. As you are a guest in
their village, please respect these requests.
The village of Hua Don Daeng, at the northern
tip of the island, is where the accommodation has been built. The simple community
guesthouse (dm 30,000K), with two rooms and
mattresses on the floor, makes a good base
from which to visit Wat Phu Champasak and
Uo Moung. There is a bathroom with bucket
shower, but we recommend bathing localstyle in the Mekong. Delicious meals (20,000K
per meal) are prepared by the villagers, who
also rent out bikes. Village homestays are possible and cost the same price as the guesthouse
(30,000K per bed, 20,000K per meal).
In a rather different class is La Folie Lodge
(%030-534 7603; r incl breakfast US$95/140 low/high season;
ais), set on the riverbank facing Wat
Phu. Rooms are housed in elegant wooden
bungalows with lots of attention to detail,
including Lao textiles, colonial motifs and
polished wood floors. The resort includes an
inviting pool with views across to Phu Pasak.
The poolside restaurant is very atmospheric
by night and includes a wide selection of Lao
and international dishes. Rates include a
boat transfer from Ban Muang to the lodge.
La Folie is supporting several community
projects on Don Daeng, including renovation of the Ban Bang Sai School.
To get to Don Daeng take a small boat
from Ban Muang or Champasak for about
50,000K with a certain amount of negotia-
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tion. Champasak guesthouses can assist but
will likely charge 60,000K to 70,000K. The
Champasak District Visitor Information Centre
(p276) in Champasak can arrange boats and
will let the villagers know you’re coming, as
will the Provincial Tourism Office in Pakse (p268).
UO MOUNG ( TOMO TEMPLE)
ºÞ´¤ (¸×©Âª½Â´½)
The Khmer temple ruin of Uo Moung (Tomo Temple;
admission 10,000K; h7.30am-4.30pm) is believed to
have been built late in the 9th century during
the reign of the Khmer King Yasovarman I.
It’s about 45km south of Pakse off Rte 13, in
a wonderfully shaded forest beside a small
tributary of the Mekong. The exact function
of the temple is unknown, though its orientation towards the holy mountain Phu Pasak
suggests its location was somehow related
to Wat Phu.
The ruins include an entranceway bordered by distance markers (often mistaken
for lingas) and two crumbling gopura (ornate
entranceways). The more intact of the gopura
contains an unusual lingam-style stone post
on which two faces have been carved. It’s unusual because mukhalinga usually have four
mukha (faces), while most ordinary linga have
no face at all. Several sandstone lintels are displayed on rocks beneath towering dipterocarp
trees, but the best examples of lintels from this
site are in the Champasak Historical Heritage
Museum in Pakse (p269). The white building at the heart of the site houses a bronze
Sukhothai-style Buddha.
Getting There & Away
The easiest way to get to Uo Muong is by
boat from Don Daeng, Ban Muang (the
village on the far side of the Mekong from
Champasak) or Champasak. You can charter a
boat to Ban Tomo (the riverbank village about
400m south of the ruins) for about 200,000K
return, including waiting time of an hour or
so while you locate and tour the ruins. Prices
fall as the boat distance gets shorter, so riding
a bicycle to Ban Sisouk at the south end of
Don Daeng and taking a boat from there is
cheapest (60,000K or so return).
From Ban Tomo, climb the riverbank and
walk north through the village, following the
road right, then left. The temple is in a forest.
If in doubt, ask the kids along the way. The
ruins can also be reached by vehicle from
Pakse by turning west just before Km 42.
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AROUND CHAMPASAK
To
Pakse
Don Pha
Kham
Ban
Phaphin
13
Community
Guesthouse
ay
Ban Hua
Don Daeng
Tu
Ferry
Route
Hu
ay
Champasak
Ban Lak 30
Ban Muang
See Champasak
Map (p276)
Note: Island sizes vary
with river height
4 km
2 miles
To Pakse
(30km)
Lodge
Don Daeng
Ban Khua
Tuay
Ban Bang Sai
Ban Si
Mungkhun
Ban
Peuay
Lao
Prasat
Muang Kao
Ban Pak Tuay
Ban Xieng
Vang
Ban Thong
Khop
Ban Boung
Kham
Ban Khon Noi
Hong
Tha Tao
Rough tracks; difficult
in wet season
Ban
Sisuk
Wat Muang
Kang
Ban Tomo Nawk
(Muang Pathumphon)
Ban Hang
Daeng
Uo Moung
(Tomo Temple)
M
ek
Ban Tomo
on
g
Ri
y
Ho Nang
Sida
Hua
Wat Phu
Champasak
(See Map
p279)
Sawa
H
To uay
mo
Huay
Thumphon
ve
Ban Don
Talat
r
Ban
Thang
Beng
Don Khao
To Ban That
(11km)
To Kiet Ngong (11km);
Ban Phapho (22km)
13
By boat, you could combine a trip to Uo
Muong with a stop at Wat Muang Kang on the
west bank of the Mekong. Another option is to
rent a bike on Don Daeng, take it by boat first
to Uo Moung, then Wat Muang Kang, and
ride the riverside path back to Champasak.
KIET NGONG & BAN PHAPHO
®É¾$°¾Â²/¡¼©¨Ü¤
Perched on the edge of Se Pian NPA, the Lao
Loum villagers of Kiet Ngong have had a
centuries-long relationship with elephants.
The elephants have traditionally worked
moving logs or doing heavy work in the rice
fields. Typically each elephant has a different
owner and in many cases the relationship
between owner and pachyderm has existed
To Don
Xai
To Hat Xai
Khun (75km);
Voen Kham (110km)
for the majority of both lives. But as elephants
are expensive to keep and machines now do
much of their traditional work, the village
has turned to tourism to help pay their way.
Kiet Ngong is at the edge of a wetland 11km
from Rte 13 and is also home to Kingfisher
Eco-Lodge, one of Laos’s first real ecolodges.
The wetland is used by an unusually large
herd of buffalo and more than 90 species of
bird have been sighted.
Almost everyone who comes to Kiet Ngong
takes the elephant ride to the summit of a hill
called Phu Asa, named for a group of 19thcentury nationalists who fought against the
Siamese. The flat-topped hill is topped by an
expansive archaeological site. Unmortared
slate-brick columns, topped by larger slabs,
SOUTHERN LAOS
To Ban Mai
(2km)
SOUTHERN LAOS
284 C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • K i e t N g o n g & B a n P h a p h o
stand about 2m high and enclose a rectangular space about 180m long and 50m wide.
At the centre of the site is a crumbling and
overgrown temple. At its far end a trail leads
down to a Buddha footprint. The site has a
Stonehenge feel to it but, contrary to what the
locals will tell you, the columns are probably
not 1000 years old.
From the top you can see across the
wetlands and vast swaths of forest, though
the 90-minute elephant trek (120,000K per
elephant) follows a steep laterite road rather
than a forest path. It is also possible to hire a
guide and walk up and back through the forest
(60,000K per four people or less).
Guides can be found at the new Visitor
Information Centre (%030-534 6547) at the entrance to the village, built as part of the Asian
Development Bank’s pro-poor tourism initiative, designed to bring tourist dollars to some
of the poorest communities in the country.
The centre arranges elephant rides and local
accommodation, and has information about
the local area and Se Pian NPA. If telephoning
for information ask a Lao speaker to translate.
About 15km east of Kiet Ngong is the Suay
village of Ban Phapho (22km east of Rte 13), a
traditional breeding centre for working elephants. However, elephant breeding appears
to be a dying art because the mahouts of Kiet
Ngong and Ban Phapho won’t let their female
elephants mate for fear they will wind up with
broken hips (not uncommon, apparently).
The owners just can’t risk the loss of income.
Clearly this isn’t a sustainable policy, but no
one seemed to have any alternative plan when
we asked.
Ban Phapho itself is old and quite attractive.
Mr Bounhome, who runs the only guesthouse,
arranges elephant rides (120,000K) or can take
you to watch the elephants working (80,000K,
in season). At either village it’s worth arriving early or calling ahead as it takes a couple
of hours to fetch and prepare the elephants.
Visitors heading to Kiet Ngong or Ban
Phapho must pay a 10,000K entry fee for Se
Pian NPA.
Sleeping & Eating
Kiet Ngong might seem an unlikely place for
one of Laos’s first real eco-lodges, but that is
exactly what opened here in 2006. Run by a
Lao-Italian family, Kingfisher Eco-Lodge (%030534 5016; www.kingfisherecolodge.com; r 180,000-765,000K)
is set on 7ha at the edge of a wetland, about
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700m east of Kiet Ngong. It’s a beautiful spot
and sitting on the balcony at dawn, watching
a herd of buffalo splash their way across the
wetland while mahouts ride their elephants
towards work is memorable.
There are four classy bungalows
(585,000/765,000K low/high season), which
include balconies with large rattan hammocks, his and hers sinks and ethnic motifs.
There are also four ecorooms (that’s ‘eco’ for
economy; 180,000/270,000K low/high season), which are nice enough with spotless
shared bathrooms, but have thin walls. Lights
and hot water are solar powered. The highlight is the restaurant and bar, which could
easily be in an East African safari lodge. There
is also free internet available for guests but
no wi-fi.
Activities include elephant rides, birdwatching (November to January is best),
mountain biking, trekking by foot and even
a day-long course to learn how to become a
mahout (600,000K). It’s also the best place
to arrange the Ta Ong trek into Se Pian NPA
because they have the most-knowledgeable
English-speaking guides. Kingfisher is extremely transparent about where the benefits
of these activities go, including information
on village income and lodge profits.
On the far side of the village, a 15-minute
walk through rice fields, are five basic and
ageing community-run bungalows (30,000K). The
location is fantastic, but the bungalows are
not. Instead, get the villagers to set up your
mattress and mosquito net on the sala overlooking the wetland. Homestays for 30,000K
per person are also possible. Arrange either of
them at the Visitor Information Centre: for
bungalows say ‘heuan phak’, for homestays
say ‘homestay’.
In Ban Phapho, the Boun Home Guest House
(%030-534 6293; per bed 30,000K) has small, ultrasimple rooms in an authentic wooden
house. The bathroom is shared and there’s no
hot water, but Mr Bounhome and his family
are welcoming and speak some English and
French. Order meals of làap (20,000K) and
khào nǐaw in advance.
Getting There & Away
Kiet Ngong and Ban Phapho are off the sometimes diabolical Rte 18A that runs east from
Ban Thang Beng, 48km south of Pakse on Rte
13, to Attapeu. The turn-off for Kiet Ngong
is about 8.5km east of Rte 13 and the vil-
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lage is 1.8km further south. For Ban Phapho,
continue along Rte 18 and soon after the Kiet
Ngong turn-off take the right fork; it’s about
15km along this road. These roads are easily
travelled on small motorbikes and should be
passable, if sometimes slippery, most of the
year.
Sǎwngthǎew (25,000K, 1½ to 2½ hours)
leave Kiet Ngong at about 8am. From Ban
Phapho sǎwngthǎew leave at 8am or 9am
(sometimes only one service runs). If you
miss the 8am from Kiet Ngong, you should be
able to jump on one of these when they pass
on Rte 18. These same sǎwngthǎew return
from Pakse’s southern bus terminal between
about noon or so; Kiet Ngong is often misunderstood so ask instead for ‘Phu Asa’.
Alternatively, board anything going south
on Rte 13, get off at Ban Thang Beng and wait
for transport bumping its way east.
SE PIAN NPA
The second day starts with a fantastic dawn
walk through the forest. If you’re lucky you
might hear the haunting call of rare yellowcheeked crested gibbons. After breakfast you
can choose an easy one-hour walk and boat
trip, or a steamy three-hour bush bash via a
spectacular natural viewpoint.
You can book the trek (dry season only)
through either the Provincial Tourism Office
in Pakse (p268) or Kingfisher Eco-Lodge in
Kiet Ngong (p284). The latter trek is more
expensive but includes an excellent Englishspeaking guide. There’s no electricity in Ta
Ong so bring a torch (flashlight).
SI PHAN DON (FOUR THOUSAND
ISLANDS)
¦Ù²×$©º$
Si Phan Don is where Laos becomes the land
of the lotus eaters, an archipelago of islands
where the pendulum of time swings more
slowly and life is more laid-back, a world
somewhat disconnected from the mainland
beyond. Many a traveller has washed ashore
here, succumbed to its charms and stayed
longer than expected. The name literally
means ‘Four Thousand Islands’, and the few
you are likely to visit on this scenic 50km-long
stretch of the Mekong are so tranquil that it’s
easy to understand the allure.
During the rainy season this section of the
Mekong fills out to a breadth of 14km, the
river’s widest reach along its 4350km journey
from the Tibetan Plateau to the South China
Sea. During the dry months between monsoons the river recedes and leaves behind hundreds (or thousands if you count every sand
bar) of islands and islets. The largest of the
permanent islands are inhabited year-round
and offer fascinating glimpses of traditional
river-oriented village life – ‘more detached
from time than from the riverbank’ as one
source described it. Communities tend to be
self-sufficient, growing most of their own rice,
sugar cane, coconut and vegetables, catching
fish and weaving textiles as needed. Women
wash their clothes in the Mekong as long-tail
boats weave around the bathing buffalo.
Island life is changing, however, and electricity and tourism are the big drivers. Don
Khong attracts travellers looking for better
lodgings while Don Det has become one of
Southeast Asia’s backpacker magnets, with
all the good and bad that entails. Don Khon
falls somewhere in between.
SOUTHERN LAOS
¯È¾¦½¹¤¸$Á¹È¤§¾©À§¯¼$
Se Pian NPA (www.xepian.org) is one of the most
important protected areas in Laos. Stretching
between Rte 18 in the north, Rte 13 to the west
and the Cambodian border in the south, the
2400 sq km is fed by three major rivers, the
Se Pian, Se Khampho and Se Kong. It boasts
globally significant populations of banteng,
Asiatic black bear, yellow-cheeked crested
gibbon and gaur, among others. There may
also be a few tigers. It’s also home to many
birds, including the rare sarus crane, vultures
and hornbills.
The reason Se Pian’s wildlife population
is so significant (unlike most other NPAs) is
that barely anyone lives here, so the wildlife
hasn’t been hunted to the verge of extinction.
The most southern permanent settlement is
the ethnic Lavae (commonly known as Brou)
village of Ta Ong, and it’s in this extremely poor
village that you’ll stay if you do the two-day Ta
Ong trek. This is the hardest of the treks we’ve
done in Laos, but it’s the only way to get into
this way-off-the-beaten-track part of Se Pian.
Much of the five-hour first day involves barely
visible trails and wading through streams.
The villagers’ belief system is a mix of animism and Buddhism and, if our experience is
anything to go by, they know how to have fun –
especially the guy playing the kaen, a bamboo
instrument that looks like a long pan-flute but
sounds more like an accordion. Brou bagpipes
is how one of our party summed it up.
C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • S e Pi a n N PA 285
286 C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • S i P h a n D o n ( F o u r T h o u s a n d I s l a n d s )
The villages of Si Phan Don are often
named for their position at the upriver or
downriver ends of their respective islands. The
upriver end is called hǔa (head), the downriver end is called hǎang (tail). Hence Ban Hua
Khong is at the northern end of Don Khong,
while Ban Hang Khong is at the southern end.
The French left behind a defunct short
railway (the only railway ever actually completed in Laos), a couple of river piers, and
a few colonial buildings. Other attractions
include some impressive rapids and the Khon
Phapheng (p295) waterfall, where the Mekong
suddenly drops in elevation at the Cambodian
border. The increasingly rare Irrawaddy dolphin (p292) also likes to hang out in the
Mekong south of the falls.
Don Khong (Khong Island)
©º$¢¤
SOUTHERN LAOS
%031 / pop 13,000
Even in Laos, where ‘sleepy’ seems an almost
universal adjective to describe provincial
towns, Muang Khong, Don Khong’s epicentre, is the epitome of the sleepy district capital. Life moves slowly here, like a boat being
paddled against the flow on the Mekong, and
you’ll seldom be disturbed by a vehicle. It’s
no party town – keep going south for that –
but the torpid pace of life here and the sights
around the island make it an attractive place
to pass a day or two, pedalling about on a bicycle or just chilling by the river. In some ways it
is more relaxing that its sister islands, perhaps
because of fewer foreigners and wider skies.
Named for the surrounding river (using the
Thai pronunciation khǒng rather than the Lao
khǎwng), this large island measures 18km long
by 8km at its widest point. Most of the islanders live in and around two villages, Muang
Khong on the eastern shore and Muang Saen
on the west; an 8km road links the two.
As his surname suggests, the postman
who went on to become president of Laos,
Khamtay Siphandone, was born in Si Phan
Don in 1924, in Ban Hua Khong at the north
end of Don Khong. His family are quite influential here, although rumours that he is
seeing out his retirement on the island are
apparently untrue, as locals say he is living it
up in the cool climes of Paksong.
INFORMATION
The police are a block back from the river
in Muang Khong. If you have any minor
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ailments, Dr Soubane speaks English and
French and is based at the hospital, midway
between Muang Khong and Ban Huay. If it
is something more serious, head for Pakse
or Thailand.
Agricultural Promotion Bank (h9.30am-4pm
Mon-Fri) South of town, this bank offers poor rates for US
dollars and Thai baht cash, and travellers cheques (8000K
charge per cheque).
Khong Tourism Office (%020-257 0373) Set in a
dilapidated colonial villa dating from 1937, the period
furnishings don’t look to have changed in the days since
the French departed. Mr Phan sits upstairs and speaks
some English, but it’s probably of more interest for the
architecture than information.
Lao Telecom On the road to Muang Saen.
Phoukhong Guesthouse (%213 673; per hr 30,000K;
h7am-9pm) Has several computers, but the connection
is not superfast.
Post Office Just south of the bridge.
SIGHTS & ACTIVITIES
Don Khong is a pretty island with rice fields
and low hills in the centre and vegetable
gardens around the perimeter, punctuated
by small villages, most of which have their
own wats. Bicycle (ecofriendly) or motorbike
(ecolazy) is the best way to explore it.
Muang Khong is dominated by Wat Phuang
Kaew and its towering modern ‘naga protected’
Buddha image facing east. The locals believe
the abbot used supernatural powers gained
in meditation to defeat government efforts
to oust him after the Revolution. Elsewhere
in Muang Khong, the market is fascinating
between 4.30am and 6.30am, when people
come from throughout the islands to buy and
sell. Many come by boat and getting yourself
down to the small beach at dawn to watch the
boats unload their fish, fowl and other fare is
a fantastic way to start the day.
At Ban Xieng Wang, a neighbourhood at
the northern end of Muang Khong, is Wat Jom
Thong, the oldest temple on the island. Dating
from the Chao Anou period (1805–28), the
main sǐm features a unique cruciform floor
plan in crumbling brick and stucco with a
tile roof. Carved wooden window shutters
are a highlight, and an old wooden standing Buddha in one-handed abhaya mudra
(offering protection) is notable. The sandy
temple grounds are shaded by coconut and
betel palms and mango trees.
A kilometre or so north of Muang Khong,
in some hills more or less behind the mayor’s
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C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • S i P h a n D o n ( F o u r T h o u s a n d I s l a n d s ) 287
0
0
SI PHAN DON
ὄ
A
B
C
D
To Pakse
(104km)
Ban
Phonsa-at
1
4 km
2 miles
Don
San
13
Underwater unless end of dry season
Note: Island sizes vary with river height
Ban Hua
Khong Laem
Ban
Huay Hai
Ban Hat
Ban Hua
Khong
2
Don
Het
Ban
Nalan
To Tham Phu Khiaw
(Green Mountain
Cave) (100m);
Ban Hua Khong (11km)
6
0
Small Beach
ὈὈ
ὈὈ
ὄὄ
ὄ
ὄ
ὄὄ
Ban
Dong
17
5
Don
Hinyai
School
13
Ban Vung Tong
16
Don
Khong
14
12
4
10
Muang Khong
Police
3
Muang Khong
Ban
Pakse
See
Enlargement
Don
Long
SIGHTS & ACTIVITIES
Market.................................... 5
Wat Jom Thong....................... 6
Wat Phu Khao Kaew................7
Wat Phuang Kaew.................. 8
SLEEPING
Auberge Sala Done Khong...... 9
Done Khong Guest House &
Restaurant......................... 10
Mekong Guest House............ 11
Phoukhong Guest House &
Restaurant......................... 12
Pon's Arena Hotel..................13
Pon’s River Guest House........14
Senesothxeun Hotel.............. 15
Souksabay Guesthouse.......... 16
Souksan Hotel....................... 17
Villa Kang Khong................... 18
Villa Muong Khong Hotel...... 19
Don
Phuman
Car Ferry
2
Ban Hang
Khong
1
To Car
Ferry (4km)
11
19
Ban
Khinak
D4
D4
C3
D3
Don
Som
Ban Keng
Koum
D2
D2
B3
D3
15
Ban Hat
13
Don
Loppadi
Ban
Nakasang
D4
D3
D4
D3
D2
D3
D4
D3
D2
D3
D4
TRANSPORT
Boats to Hat Xai Khun........... 20 D3
Don
Tholathi
Don
Xang
Don
Toum
Bridge
Ban
Khon Tai
Don
Saniat Tat
Somphamit
Don
Sahong
Ban Khon
Don
Khon
Don
Som
Ban Hang
Khon
To Trapeang Kriel
(Cambodia)
Ban
Thakho
Don
Tao
Don
En
Don
Det
French
Walls
Dolphins
Khon
Phapheng
Don Falls
Phapheng
Don
Sadam
SOUTHERN LAOS
INFORMATION
Agricultural Promotion Bank.... 1
Khong Tourism Office............. 2
Lao Telecom............................ 3
Post Office.............................. 4
6
8
To Muang Saen
(8km)
9
Ban
Huay
Don
Tan
CAMBODIA
5
3
Muang
Saen
Kompong
Sralao
4
Hat Xai
Khun
Tham Phu Khiaw
Ban Na
20
18
Ban Xieng Wang
7
Don
Khamao
Mekong River
Don
Koi
100 m
Ban Xieng Wang
To Ban
Nasenphan
(5km)
SOUTHERN LAOS
288 C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • S i P h a n D o n ( F o u r T h o u s a n d I s l a n d s )
office, a trail leads to Tham Phu Khiaw (Green
Mountain Cave). The cave – actually more
of an overhanging ledge – contains some old
Buddha images and is the object of local pilgrimages during Lao New Year in April. To
find it, head north from Muang Khong for
1.5km and take a track to the left, through a
banana plantation. It’s only a 15-minute walk
(mostly uphill) to the cave entrance, marked
by two tree trunks, but the track isn’t always
obvious so it’s best to find a local to guide you.
Muang Saen, on the opposite side of the island from Muang Khong, is a bustling little
town with boats servicing the islands to the
west of Don Khong that have no road access whatsoever. If your trip doesn’t include
Cambodia, it is possible to take a boat across
to the Cambodian village of Kompong Sralao
on the west bank of the Mekong. There’s
nothing to see, but you can say that you’ve
been to a part of Cambodia few others have
visited and sample an Angkor Beer. There
were no immigration facilities at the time of
research. Wat Phu Khao Kaew, on a low hill north
of Muang Saen (about 5km from the junction
of the north–south and east–west roads), was
built on the site of some Khmer ruins. It is
believed to be home to a naga, though the
entrance to its lair is covered. Look for a stand
of frangipani trees on the eastern side of the
hill to locate the path to the temple, or hire
a motorcycle taxi in Muang Saen for around
30,000K return.
Two smaller villages at the southern tip of
the island worth visiting for old wats are Ban
Huay and Ban Hang Khong.
FESTIVALS & EVENTS
A boat-racing festival (Bun Suang Heua,
also referred to as Bun Nam) is held on Don
Khong in early December around National
Day, usually the first or second weekend of the
month. Four or five days of carnival-like activity culminate in races opposite Muang Khong,
much closer to the shore than in larger towns.
SLEEPING
Muang Khong has the best range of accommodation anywhere in the islands and standards are generally higher than those on Don
Det or Don Khon. They are all on, or just back
from, the riverbank along a 700m-stretch.
Most have attached restaurants.
oPhoukhong Guesthouse & Restaurant
(%213 673; r 40,000-100,000K; ai) This place has
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gone up in the world thanks to an elegant new
structure with four bedrooms, all boasting
panoramic views to the Mekong. However,
the windows are full frontal, so it may be
better to take rooms 201 or 202 upstairs to
avoid the public glare. The bathrooms are
sparkling new and the air-con adds a chilled
atmosphere to the place. The old rooms are
disappointingly barren by comparison, but
are very cheap.
Souksabay Guesthouse (%214 122; r 50,000-80,000K;
a) A friendly guesthouse near the riverfront,
the rooms are set around a leafy garden which
gives the place a relaxing vibe. The 11 rooms
include TV and hot water shower. Out front
is a minimart with a basic menu of Lao dishes.
Souksan Hotel (%212 071; r 60,000-100,000K;
a) Once one of the more pricey options in
Muang Khong, rates are now very reasonable,
possibly as it is the last place on the strip,
about 250m north of the bridge. Souksan
offers spacious rooms with hot water, the
cheaper options with fan only. There is also
an attached restaurant perched over the river.
Pon’s River Guest House (%214 037; r US$6-15; a)
A reliable spot thanks to English-speaking Mr
Pon, the rooms are good value, as he has reduced the prices since opening his swish new
Arena Hotel. Air-con rooms are spacious with
smart bedding and a satellite TV. Pon’s offers
transport all over the southern Laos region.
Auberge Sala Done Khong (%212 077; www.salalao.
com; s/d incl breakfast US$20/25, ste from US$26/33; a)
One of the first auberges to welcome guests
on Don Khong, this remains an atmospheric if
somewhat time-warped place. Part of the Sala
Lao group, one of the original French-era teak
mansions is under renovation and this may
lead to a hike in rates. Prices drop by 20% or
more from May through September.
Pon’s Arena Hotel (%253 065; www.ponhotel.com;
r US$40-50; ai) Clearly the locals have been
spurred on by the arrival of the Senesothxeun
Hotel. Mr Pon has borrowed heavily from
their blueprint to invest in this stylish villa
with 21 rooms, including seven with a Mekong
view. Furnishings are tasteful throughout, including the contemporary bathrooms, and
rooms include a terrace or balcony.
Villa Muong Khong Hotel (%213 051; www.
khongislandtravel.com; r incl breakfast US$40/45; ai)
Another long-running place popular with
tour groups, the Villa Muong Khong has
somehow managed to squeeze 52 rooms into
one riverfront site. Standards can differ much
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C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • S i P h a n D o n ( F o u r T h o u s a n d I s l a n d s ) 289
more significantly than the prices suggest, so
it pays to look at a few. The big rooms are
slightly spartan, but staff say an upgrade is in
the pipeline. French and English are spoken.
Senesothxeun Hotel (%030-526 0577; www.ssx
hotel.com; r incl breakfast US$45-80; aiW) Let’s
agree to forgive the unpronounceable name
(or the awful abbreviation), for this is the
smartest hotel on Don Khong. Rooms offer
tasteful linens, Lao silks and fine wood finishing, plus satellite TV and minibar. The
bathrooms include a rain shower. River views
start at US$50.
Other options are:
Done Khong Guest House & Restaurant (%214
010; r 50,000-120,000K; a) In a prime position near the
bridge, the upstairs fan-rooms open onto a balcony and are
good value at 50,000K.
Mekong Guest House (%213 668; r 50,000-120,000K;
a) Sprawling over a family compound, the air-con
rooms here are in pretty good shape for the kip.
Villa Kang Khong (%213 539; r 60,000-100,000K;
a) Set back from the river, this old-time favourite is set
in a spacious teak house, but rooms are a little threadbare.
ing rooms in the Si Phan Don area. Fresh fish
specialities are on the menu, plus comfort
food like pasta and salads.
GETTING THERE & AWAY
Boat
The slow boat to Pakse is extinct, so plan on
arriving by a combination of boat and road.
There are regular boats between Hat Xai
Khun and Don Khong; it’s 20,000K per boat
for one person, or 10,000K per person for
two or more. Bargaining is futile. The boatman will take you as near as possible to your
guesthouse of choice. The vehicle ferry between Ban Hat and Ban Na charges 2000K
per pedestrian and 7000K per motorcycle
(including passengers).
Mr Pon operates boats for Don Det and
Don Khon (40,000K per person one way,
60,000K return, 1½ hours) at 8.30am. Getting
to Don Khon in the dry season will require a
smaller boat. Chartering a private boat for this
run will cost about 200,000K.
Bus, Sǎwngthǎew & Minibus
EATING
Sǎwngthǎew and buses head to Pakse
(50,000K, 2½ to 3½ hours, 128km) until about
10am. After that, head over to Rte 13 and wait
for anything heading north.
For the Cambodian border, there is usually
a 9am connection that costs US$8 to Stung
Treng, US$12 to Kratie, US$15 to Ban Lung
and US$18 to Phnom Penh.
Finally, Pon’s River Guest House has aircon minibuses that run at 11.30am daily to
Pakse for 60,000K.
GETTING AROUND
Bicycles (8000K to 10,000K per day) and
motorbikes (from 60,000K per day) can be
hired from guesthouses and elsewhere along
the main street. Alternatively, haggle with a
jumbo driver.
Don Det & Don Khon
©º$À©©/©º$£º´
Welcome to the travellers’ mecca that is Don
Det and Don Khon. Life on these twin islands
feels so laid back that you can imagine them
just drifting downriver into Cambodia with
barely anyone blinking an eyelid. The land
of the lotus eaters is writ true on Don Det,
as many a traveller has found themselves in
a hammock-bound slumber, unable to drag
themselves away from the island’s charms.
SOUTHERN LAOS
Apart from the odd place selling fǒe and Lao
snacks, all the eating options are restaurants
attached to the aforementioned accommodation. Most places serve Don Khong’s famous
lào-láo, which is often cited as the smoothest
in the country.
Done Khong Guest House & Restaurant (mains
15,000-50,000K; h6.30am-10pm) In an appealing
position by the river, this place serves tasty
Lao dishes such as làap, the mysterious ‘soup
with chicken gallingly root’ (we thought it was
galangal on tasting), and plenty of rice dishes.
Pon’s (mains 15,000-50,000K; h6.30am-10pm) Pon’s
fresh river fish are worth a shot; the mok pa
(steamed fish in banana leaf) is particularly
good. An extensive menu that includes Lao,
Thai and traveller fare and an attractive riverfront terrace make this a travellers’ favourite.
Auberge Sala Don Khong (mains 20,000-60,000K;
h7am-10pm) The Lao and European fare here
is enjoyable and the setting romantic by Don
Khong standards. Dishes includes Laotian
greatest hits, plus a smattering of Frenchaccented creations. Nonguests should give
the kitchen some notice.
Senesothxeun Hotel (mains 20,000-50,000K;
h6.30am-10pm) The restaurant here is not as
expensive as the room tariffs would suggest.
It is also one of the only air-conditioned din-
3
DON DET &
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Vang Vieng, the town most often compared
with these two islands, feels like Woodstock
by comparison.
Don Det has developed dramatically in
the past decade and is the more rock’n’roll
of the two. Ban Hua Det, at the north end
of the island has emerged as a sort of backpacker tractor beam. This market is serviced
by music and TV, pool tables and restaurantbars where travellers, for an extra 10,000K
or so, can choose anything ‘happy’ – ‘happy’
mashed potatoes, ‘happy’ Lao coffee. Change
may be on the way, however, as former president Khamtay Siphandon is concerned about
the impact stoned foreigners are having on
local life, not to mention his reputation thanks
to the shared name.
The islanders are benefitting from the income tourism brings, but many are aware
enough of the potential changes to cite Vang
Vieng as an example of what they don’t want
to become. Having a spliff is part of backpacker experience and the locals we spoke
with seemed to have accepted the arrival of
marijuana in Ban Hua Det, but they’d prefer
it was an incidental part of a visit rather than
the sole reason for coming. They are not, however, that pleased about the arrival of harder
drugs, worrying about the influence on their
kids. Wherever you are it’s polite to ask before
you light up.
If this isn’t your scene don’t scratch the
islands off your itinerary yet. Respite is only
a short walk away and it’s on Don Khon, or
at the guesthouses along the southern bank of
Don Det, where things are much more serene.
This is more what the islands were like when
people were first drawn to them, with a sort
of timeless beauty best appreciated by riding
a bicycle around the few sights, swinging in a
hammock, reading a book and chatting with
locals and travellers alike.
The islands were an important link for supply lines between Saigon and Laos during the
French colonial era. In order to bypass the
rapids and waterfalls in the Mekong River, the
French built a narrow-gauge railway across
the two islands, linked by an attractive arched
bridge and terminating in concrete piers at
either end. Small engines pulled cargo across
the islands but the French dream of making
the Mekong a highway to China never really
materialised. The bridge and piers remain but
no engine has run since WWII, and most of
the track has long since been carted off.
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SOUTHERN LAOS
290 C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • S i P h a n D o n ( F o u r T h o u s a n d I s l a n d s )
Kong \
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4
CAMBODIA
Don Khon, the larger of the two islands, is
famous throughout Laos for the cultivation
of coconut, bamboo and kapok. In the main
village, Ban Khon, there are several crumbling
French buildings that are about 100 years
old. Wat Khon Tai, in Ban Khon Tai, towards
the southwestern end of Ban Khon, is a Lao
temple built on the former site of an ancient
Khmer temple, the laterite remains of which
are scattered around the site.
INFORMATION
There are plenty of internet cafes clustered
along the main drag in Ban Hua Det, all charging a uniform 400K per minute. There are also
a handful of places on Don Khon to the east of
the bridge. There is no bank, no medical serv-
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INFORMATION
Mr B's Sunset View............................(see 7)
Xplore-Asia ........................................... 1 A1 Mr Mo Guesthouse...........................(see 8)
Mr Phao's Sunrise
SIGHTS & ACTIVITIES
Bungalows ...................................... 11 B1
Wat Khon Tai........................................ 2 A3 Mr Tho's Guesthouse.....................12 A1
Mr Tho's Bungalows &
SLEEPING i
Restaurant.......................................13 B1
Auberge Sala Don Khone ................ 3 B2 Pan's Guesthouse &
Dalom Guesthouse........................(see 12)
Restaurant.......................................14 B2
Don Det Bungalows .......................... 4 A1 Paradise Bungalows........................15 A1
Guesthouse Souksanh...................... 5 B2 River Garden...................................... 16 B2
King Kong Resort................................ 6 B2 Sala Phae.............................................17 B2
Little Eden............................................. 7 A1 Santiphab Guesthouse ..................18 A2
Mama Tanon Bungalows................. 8 A1 Seng Ahloune Guesthouse
Mekong Dream................................... 9 A2
& Restaurant...................................19 A3
Mr Bounehome's Bungalows .......10 B2 Sidae's Bungalows......................... (see 15)
ices and not even a post office. Some guesthouses and restaurants will change money at
poor rates: Mr Mo Guesthouse was offering
the most generous rate during our visit.
Xplore-Asia (www.xplore-asia.com) has an officecum-bar-cum-cafe in Ban Hua Det. It offers
various boating options, including kayaking, rafting and sunset pleasure cruises, and
can arrange all manner of transport, including connections to Cambodia. Most other
guesthouses can also hook you up with onward transport north to Pakse and south to
Cambodia. Shop around for the best price.
SIGHTS & ACTIVITIES
Tat Somphamit (Li Phi Falls)
ª¾©¦Ü´²¾´Ø©
About 1.5km downriver from Ban Khon is
a raging set of rapids called Tat Somphamit
but referred to by just about everyone as Li
Phi Falls. Li Phi means ‘trap spirit’ and locals
EATING @
Chanthounma's Restaurant ......... 23 B2
Fleur Du Mekong............................(see 19)
Jasmine Restaurant......................... 24 A1
Khamphong Restaurant...............(see 20)
Lamphoune's Restaurant
Bakery................................................(see 4)
DRINKING
Beach ..................................................(see 20)
Pool Bar................................................(see 1)
believe the falls act as just that – a trap for
bad spirits (of deceased people and animals)
as they wash down the river. You’ll never see
locals swimming here – mixing with the dead
is clearly tempting fate a little too much – and
it’s both culturally insensitive and dangerous
to do so. Water churns through the falls at a
frenetic pace, especially during the wet season,
and we are aware of two travellers who have
drowned here in recent years.
Much less risky but thoroughly captivating is watching local fishermen edging out to
clear the enormous bamboo traps. During the
early rains, a well-positioned trap can catch
half a tonne of fish a day. Some traps here and
elsewhere in the area have an intake almost
10m long, funnelling fish into a huge basket
at the end.
The falls can be reached via the main path
heading southwest out of Ban Khon, or on a
smaller, shaded and more attractive path that
passes through the wat and avoids the trucks
full of Thai tourists and their billowing dust.
There are plenty of small eat-drink shops at
the falls.
Railway Hike
On Don Khon you can make an interesting
5km trek across the island by following the
old rail bed. Rusting locomotives sit near either end of the line, including one located
about 75m from the south end of the bridge
in an area that once doubled as the rail service
yard. Heading south, the trail passes stretches
of primary forest, rice fields, small villages
and singing birds, eventually emerging at the
French loading pier, which resembles the skeleton of an unfinished hotel from afar. Across
the river to the right is Cambodia. The rail
bed is quite a rocky road and tough on a bike.
An alternative path runs nearer the island’s
SOUTHERN LAOS
There are a few things to see while you’re
relaxing on the islands, all of which are best
accessed on a bicycle hired for about 10,000K
per day. Mr Mo Guesthouse has the best bikes
available, including Trek, Giant and Merida
mountain bikes, for 20,000K per day.
Floating around in inner tubes is a pretty
popular way to pass the time. It costs 5000K
per day but don’t float too far downriver or
you’ll hit the fast currents that feed into the
falls.
Don Khon has an official entrance charge
to visit the island, which is set at 20,000K per
day and is collected at a booth just below the
bridge to Don Det. This charge includes a toll
to cross the bridge, a visit to Tat Somphamit
and a fee for the community fund to ensure
tourist dollars trickle down to help provide
village services.
Souksan Hotel................................... 20 A1
Sunset View....................................... 21 A1
Tawan Daeng.....................................(see 9)
Tena Bungalows............................... 22 A1
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DOLPHINS ENDANGERED
The Irrawaddy dolphin (Orcaella brevirostris, called pąa khaa in Laos) is one of the Mekong River’s
most fascinating creatures, and one of its most endangered. From the thousands that populated
the Mekong and its tributaries in Cambodia and southern Laos as recently as the 1970s, it’s now
estimated there are fewer than 100 remaining. The surviving few live primarily along a 190km
stretch of the Mekong between the Lao border and the Cambodian town of Kratie.
The dark blue to grey cetaceans grow to 2.75m long and are recognisable by their bulging
foreheads and small dorsal fins. They are unusually adaptable and can live in fresh or salt water,
though they are seldom seen in the sea. The only other known populations in Myanmar and
Bangladesh are thought to be equally, if not more at risk of extinction.
Among the Lao and Khmer, Irrawaddy dolphins are traditionally considered reincarnated humans
and there are many stories of dolphins having saved the lives of fishermen or villagers who have
fallen into the river or been attacked by crocodiles. These cultural beliefs mean neither the Lao
nor the Khmer intentionally capture dolphins for food or sport.
In an attempt to crush these beliefs and to extract oil for their war machinery, the Khmer Rouge
reportedly killed thousands of the dolphins in the Tonlé Sap, a large lake in Cambodia, during
their 1970s reign of terror. Since then fishermen haven’t actively targeted Irrawaddy dolphins,
but general gill netting, and grenade and dynamite fishing in Cambodia has inevitably taken its
toll on the dolphins. Education has reduced the amount of explosive fishing, but unintentional
gill netting remains a constant threat – dolphins need to surface and breathe every two to three
minutes, and will usually drown before fishermen even know they are in the nets. As if that
wasn’t bad enough, many juvenile calves have died mysteriously in recent years, suggesting
water pollution is also taking its toll.
In Laos, dolphins have been seen as far north as Sekong in recent years, but you’re most likely
to see them in the conservation zones between 10m and 60m deep that have been established
near the border, south of Don Khon. These areas are vital to the dolphins because they act as a
refuge during the dry season, when river levels drop dangerously low.
Education and conservation programs to save the dolphins continue, particularly in Cambodia,
but their survival is far from guaranteed.
SOUTHERN LAOS
western edge. The return trip, with breaks,
should take about three hours on foot.
Eastern Loop Hike
A less onerous walk or cycle takes you to the
waterways at the eastern edge of Don Khon
where the French built a series of concrete
channels used to direct logs. The logs, usually from forests in Sainyabuli Province west
of Vientiane, were usually lashed together
into rafts of three. To prevent them going
off-course, a Lao ‘pilot’ would board the raft
and steer it through the maze of islands. When
they reached the critical area at the north
end of Don Khon, the pilots were required
to guide the raft onto a reinforced concrete
wedge, thus splitting the binds and sending
the logs into the channels beyond. The poor
‘pilot’ would jump for his life moments before
impact.
You can still see the walls if you go to the
shaded village at the east end of Don Khon. To
get here, head northeast from the bridge and
turn south about 1km along, passing through
a wat and following the path through rice
fields to the riverbank. As you continue south
you’ll see the walls opposite a small village.
The path continues along the river and becomes more of a road, eventually petering out
at a stream near the southern end of the island. Nearby is the island of Don Pak Soi, which
has been earmarked for tourism development,
although when we visited it didn’t have much
to offer beyond some mighty big fish traps.
Dolphins
Rare Irrawaddy dolphins (see the boxed text)
can sometimes be seen off the southern tip of
Don Khon, mainly from December until May.
Boats chartered (60,000K per boat, maximum
three people) from the old French pier at the
south end of Don Khon run out to a small
island that looks over a deep-water conservation zone near Cambodian waters. Viewing
dolphins is best in the early morning or late
afternoon.
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Don’t expect Flipper-style antics from these
dolphins. If they are there at all you’ll see a
brief flash as they surface to breathe, then
they’re gone.
SLEEPING
Don Det
Sunset View (%020-367 6803; Sunset Strip; r 20,00060,000K) The creaking bamboo lean-tos are oldskool Don Det and start at a budget-friendly
20,000K. Across the path in a new home are
some very smart (for Don Det) double rooms
with shiny new bathrooms.
Mr Tho’s Guesthouse (%020-5656 7502; Sunrise Blvd;
r 30,000-60,000K) Confusingly there are two Mr
Tho’s on Don Det, but this is the sturdier,
more central option. Rooms are named after
local products like ‘Bamboo’ and ‘Sticky Rice’
and the bigger ones include a bathroom and
fan.
Mr B’s Sunset View (%030-534 5109; Sunset Strip;
bungalows 30,000-60,000K) English-speaking Mr B
enguesthouse-dondet.com; Sunset Strip; r 150,000-200,000K;
a) Probably the smartest rooms on Don Det
are to be found here, located on the northern
tip of the islands next to the Souksan. The
bathrooms are bigger than some bungalows
elsewhere and the air-con will ensure you’re
one of the cooler cats in town. The menu here
is among the best on the island, with plenty of
Western dishes and banana flambé.
Don Det Bungalows (%020-7772 1572; lovely_laos@
yahoo.com; Sunrise Blvd; r 150,000-250,000K; a) A new
bungalow resort with twee little wooden bungalows with elaborate temple-style roofs. Nice
touches include impressive bathrooms and
some decorative touches rarely seen elsewhere
SOUTHERN LAOS
Almost every farmer and his cow on Don Det
has jumped aboard the bungalow bandwagon
and there are now dozens of guesthouses lining the edge of the island. The greatest concentration is in Ban Hua Det at the northern
tip of Don Det, which has become the place
to be if you want to live la vida loca into the
night. From here a footpath known as Sunset
Strip leads along the northwestern edge of the
island to places that are relatively quiet and,
not surprisingly, have good sunset views. The
rest of the accommodation is spread along
the pleasant eastern shore, known as Sunrise
Boulevard. If you’d prefer to be further from
the crowds, head for the quieter places on the
southern shore of the island.
Note that things continue to change pretty
fast on Don Det, so if the place you’re looking
at isn’t listed here, that doesn’t necessarily
mean it’s not up to scratch: it might be newer
and smarter.
Don Khon is home to some more upmarket
places, pleasant eateries on the water and a less
youthful atmosphere than Don Det. Staying
on Don Khon offers a more ‘Lao’ experience.
Pretty much all the guesthouses here also
serve food and drinks all day.
Coming from Ban Nakasang (see p295),
boatmen will usually drop you at your guesthouse of choice if you ask, although this may
have an impact on price depending on the
location.
has some solid bungalows set amid extensive
gardens, but Sunset View is popular more
for the warm atmosphere and delicious food
in the cafe (mains 15,000K to 35,000K). The
pumpkin burger is the stuff of legend.
King Kong Resort (Southern Shore; bungalows 35,00050,000K) Probably the most memorable name
among the Don Det offerings, this Brit-run
‘resort’ has a couple of ensuite bungalows, two
more with shared facilities and some rooms
in an old house. The restaurant is a cut above
the competition with Italian food, pub grub
and Sunday roasts. Gay-friendly.
River Garden (%020-7770 1860; Southern Shore;
bungalows 40,000-80,000K) A small, friendly guesthouse with house-proud rooms featuring
hanging silks and local handicrafts. The pavilion restaurant has a tranquil setting on the
riverbank.
Dalom Guesthouse (Sunrise Blvd; r 40,000-80.000K)
Set in a big building for this part of the village, the upstairs rooms are spacious, clean
and include rare touches like towel and toilet
paper. The nice garden includes some cheaper
bungalows.
Souksan Hotel (%030-534 5154; Ban Hua Det; r 40,000100,000K) Hanging onto the northern tip of Don
Det, the Souksan’s solid rooms remain some
of the better options on the island. Spacious
doubles start from 60,000K, including bathroom, and staff speak reasonable English. The
restaurant (mains 15,000 to 40,000K) has fine
sunset views but it does get hot.
Mr Mo Guesthouse (%020-5575 9252; Sunrise Blvd;
r 60,000-80,000K) Another substantial cement
building offering slightly smarter than average rooms with a fully equipped bathroom.
The riverside restaurant is a good place for
travel information.
oLittle Eden (%020-7773 9045; www.littleed
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NOT AS SAME, SAME AS THEY LOOK
Standards might be rising, but for now there are still plenty of bungalows on Don Khon and
particularly Don Det that look basically the same and cost around 25,000K a night. There are,
however, a few things worth considering when making your choice, such as the following:
Bathroom As competition intensifies many guesthouses are adding basic bathrooms to their
bungalows. These can vary in standard, so take a look. Ditto for places with share bathrooms.
If you don’t want to squat, look for one with a throne.
Hammock(s) Most bungalows have balconies with hammocks, but anyone travelling as a pair
should check to see if there is room to string up two hammocks, and if there is a second one
available.
Location If it’s the hot season and you plan on sleeping in, avoid Sunrise Blvd or anywhere
facing east, where the morning sun makes your bungalow pretty toasty by 8am. By the same
token, places on Sunset Strip can be oven-like in the afternoons.
Neighbours Bamboo walls are paper thin. If you need privacy look for a detached bungalow.
Roof Tin roofs are hotter than traditional palm-frond thatch roofs.
Window(s) With the advent of electricity, all rooms have fans these days, but having two
windows in the bungalow/room means that air circulation (and the night’s sleep) is vastly
improved.
SOUTHERN LAOS
on Don Det. Prices range widely between high
and low season.
Be afraid, be very afraid, there are dozens
more options:
Mekong Dream (Southern Shore; r 40,000-60,000K)
New place boasting a hammock lounge, with 14 rattan
hammocks in which to kick back. The four rooms include
fan and bathroom.
Mr Bounehome’s Bungalows (South Sunrise Blvd;
bungalows 20,000-40,000K) True, the bungalows are
among the most basic on the island, but it’s a pretty setting with wide views and spacious grounds.
Mr Phao’s Sunrise Bungalows (Sunrise Blvd; bungalows 20,000-40,000K) South of the pier, Mr Phao’s has a
warm, family feel and bungalows set in a pretty riverside
garden.
Mr Tho’s Bungalows (%030-534 5865; Sunrise Blvd;
bungalows 30,000-50,000K) Just south of the pier, the
‘other’ Mr Tho’s has long been popular for the relaxed
atmosphere and library/book exchange.
Paradise Bungalows (Sunrise Blvd; bungalows from
20,000K) As basic as it gets, with shared bathrooms. The
book exchange helps fund a local school.
Santiphab Guesthouse (%030-534 6233; bungalows
30,000-60,000K) Near the bridge, Santiphab was one of
the first guesthouses on Don Det and is still a good option.
The stilted restaurant has panoramic views.
Sidae’s Bungalows (Sunrise Blvd; bungalows 30,000K)
Nothing to write home about, but it is the only place
promoting free petanque (boules) on the island.
Mama Tanon Bungalows (%020-5546 5262; Sunrise
Blvd; r 30,000-50,000K) Once known as the Rasta Cafe,
the spirit of Marley lives on thanks to the big communal
balcony with superb views.
Tawan Daeng (%020-5615 2173; Southern Shore;
bungalows 50,000-60,000K) Friendly spot run by Mrs
Daeng, rooms include a bathroom and the restaurant has
bridge views.
Tena Bungalows (%020-272 2730; Sunset Strip; bungalows 20,000-40,000K) Relaxed restaurant and chill-out
area with bungalows dotted about the riverside garden.
Just watch out for the resident buffalo.
Don Khon
All of Don Khon’s sleeping and eating options are spread along the river either side
of the bridge.
Guesthouse Souksanh (r from 30,000K; i) Still the
cheapest place on the Don Khon strip, rooms
are set in a bungalow block with a shared riverview terrace. The internet centre across the
road is the cheapest on the island at 15,000K
per hour.
Pan’s Guesthouse & Restaurant (%020-5534 6939;
pkounnavong@yahoo.co.uk; bungalows 70,000-130,000K;
ai) These are pretty solid bungalows
compared with those on Don Det. The aircon rooms include hot water, and some have
a riverside setting. The small restaurant is
set in a colonial shophouse across the track;
internet is available.
Seng Ahloune Guesthouse & Restaurant (%030534 5807; r US$11-30; a) Long a popular restaurant
with visiting tour groups, the family are now
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C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • S i P h a n D o n ( F o u r T h o u s a n d I s l a n d s ) 295
providing quality accommodation as well.
The fan rooms are a little pricey, but the aircon options are some of the smartest on Don
Khon, including a two-star hotel trim. Book
a bungalow with a riverside balcony. The restaurant, open from 7am to 10pm, has a huge
riverside terrace and does bubbling hotpots
for 70,000K.
Auberge Sala Don Khone (%030-525 6390; www.
salalao.com; r incl breakfast US$30-50) Formerly a small
French-era hospital, the Auberge Sala Don
Khone offers the most romantic location on
the island. It is worth paying extra for rooms in
the original building, as the bungalows aren’t
any more impressive than cheaper offerings
elsewhere. It’s a high price to pay for atmosphere, but a newer ‘heritage’ wing is under
construction, which should raise standards.
Sala Phae (% 030-525 6390; www.salalao.com;
r incl breakfast US$45) Under the same ownership
as the Auberge, this is a floating hotel with
bungalows set on bamboo rafts (phae means
raft) in the Mekong. The smart rooms include
wooden floors, a small safe, bio-safe toilet and
hot water, plus a small balcony with unblemished river views. Nice, but pricey compared
with upriver Don Khong.
EATING & DRINKING
When it comes to eating, with the exception of
guesthouses noted above for their food, most
places serve cold Beerlao and a range of Lao
and Western favourites at prices ranging from
15,000K to about 40,000K.
Lamphoune’s Restaurant Bakery (Sunrise Blvd; cakes
10,000K, mains 15,000-35,000k) A real treat, particularly for those with a bout of the munchies,
this bakery whips up delicious brownies,
carrot cake and other comforting treats. The
small Western menu includes dishes that
don’t turn up elsewhere, making it a top spot.
Khamphong Restaurant (Ban Hua Det; mains 15,00040,000K) Occupying a strategic location above
the ‘beach’ and boat landing, this relaxed restaurant offers a good selection of Lao food.
Floor seating makes it a relaxed place to linger
for a beer.
Jasmine Restaurant (%020-5563 3572; Ban Hua Det;
mains 15,000-50,000K) This is the Don Det branch
of the Pakse institution serving up a selection
of Indian favourites.
Pool Bar (Ban Hua Det) A popular drinkinghole with a busy pool table, this is one of the
Don Khon
Chanthounma’s Restaurant (mains 15,000-35,000K;
h7am-10pm) Chanthounma’s ‘good food to
suit your mood’ lives up to the advertising, delivering tasty and affordable Lao and Western
dishes. Hopefully you’ll be in a good mood by
the time you finish here.
Fleur du Mekong (% 020-5676 3141; mains
20,000-50,000K; h7am-10pm) Run by a friendly
French-speaking tour guide, this is the closest
restaurant to the bridge. Lao dishes include a
delicious duck curry and a fusion baked fish
in banana leaf or papillote.
GETTING THERE & AWAY
Boat prices to the islands are fixed by a local
boat association (that’s according to budding
communists, more like mafia to you and me).
Ban Nakasang to Don Det costs 15,000K per
person or 30,000K alone, or to Don Khon
costs 25,000K per person or 50,000K alone.
Boats can be hired to go anywhere in the islands for about 100,000K per hour.
For Pakse (30,000K, 2½ to 3½ hours,
148km), buses or sǎwngthǎew leave Ban
Nakasang regularly from 6am to 10am. Most
travellers book through tickets on the island,
including the local boat and a minibus transfer. There are usually a couple of services a day
to Pakse (50,000K, 8am & 1.30pm), plus connections to Stung Treng (US$8) and Phnom
Penh (US$11) in Cambodia.
See p274 for buses from Pakse.
Khon Phapheng Falls
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South of Don Khon the Mekong River features a 13km stretch of powerful rapids with
several sets of cascades. The largest, and by
SOUTHERN LAOS
Don Det
longer-running bars in town, also turning
out pizzas and doubling as the Xplore-Asia
office.
Other bars come in and out of fashion depending on whether or not a falang is steering the ship. Plenty of travellers are so taken
with life on Don Det that they stick around
for a while to help a local family with their
restaurant-bar. Ban Hua Det is a good place
to crawl. There seems to be a semi-official
curfew of 11.30pm when the bars wind down
and the action moves to the ‘beach’. Beach
bonfires and midnight dips are not unheard
of, but proceed with caution if you have been
drinking or smoking heavily.
296 C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • S i P h a n D o n ( F o u r T h o u s a n d I s l a n d s )
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CROSSING THE CAMBODIAN BORDER AT TRAPAENG KRIEL & NONG KHIANG
SOUTHERN LAOS
Open since 2001, this remote border (7am-5pm) is a popular crossing point on the Indochina
overland circuit. For many years, there was much confusion associated with crossing here due
to not one but two immigration posts, one on the river and one on the road. Things have finally
settled down, hence the new names, and a glitzy border gate is under construction as we go
to press. Both Lao and Cambodian visas are available on arrival, although minor overcharging
is common both sides of the border. In Laos, it’s ‘overtime’, as every day seems to be a public
holiday. In Cambodia, it’s called ‘tea money’, as the poor border guards have been stationed at
such a remote crossing. Negotiation is possible.
The route south goes to Stung Treng in northeast Cambodia. From the islands most travellers
are taking a backpacker bus (minibus) to Stung Treng (US$8, three hours, including formalities),
Kratie (US$12, five hours), Ban Lung in Ratanakiri (US$11, six hours) or Phnom Penh (US$18, 11
hours). From Pakse, it costs 120,000K to Stung Treng or 230,000K to Phnom Penh. It’s cheaper
to take the bus to Stung Treng and then board a Cambodian bus from there. Services to Siem
Reap are also advertised, but we don’t really recommend these, as they involve an overnight in
Kompong Cham, a change of bus and occasional overcharging. Take your time and soak up the
atmosphere in the laid-back riverside town of Kratie. Getting to Stung Treng by local transport is
just about possible, but you will need lots of time and it will end up costing you more money,
as you will need to charter transport to and from the remote border.
It is no longer possible to cross the border via the river and few boats operate the
stretch to Stung Treng with the advent of the upgraded road. Xplore-Asia (see p 268 ) may
be able to help arrange something via their office in Stung Treng, but it will cost quite a bit
more than the bus. They run a raft from Don Det to the border (US$20) between July and
November, connecting with the minivan running through to Stung Treng. They also offer
combination kayak trips from Si Phan Don to Stung Treng, taking in the flooded forest on
the Cambodian side.
Heading north, tourist minibuses dominate the trade from Stung Treng to Don Det and Don
Khon (US$9), Don Khong (US$11) or Pakse (US$13). There are also direct buses from Phnom Penh
to Pakse, but it’s a long haul and better broken up into bite-sized chunks.
far the most awesome anywhere along the
Mekong, is Khon Phapheng (admission 20,000K),
near the eastern shore of the Mekong not
far from Ban Thakho. Khon Phapheng isn’t
as beautiful as the towering waterfalls of
the Bolaven Plateau or the fairytale pools of
Tat Kuang Si near Luang Prabang, but it is
pure, unrestrained aggression as millions of
litres of water crash over the rocks and into
Cambodia every second. This is a spectacular
sight, particularly when the Mekong is at full
flood, and is one of the most-visited sites
in Laos for Thai tourists, who arrive by the
busload. Part of the attraction is the spiritual significance they hold for both Lao and
Thais, who believe Khon Phapheng acts as a
spirit trap in the same way as Tat Somphamit
near Don Khon.
A pavilion on the Mekong shore affords
a good view of the falls. A shaky network of
bamboo scaffolds on the rocks next to the
falls is used by daring fishermen who are
said to have an alliance with the spirits of
the cascades.
SLEEPING & EATING
Khonephapheng Resort & Golf Club (%030-516 0777;
www.khonephaphengresort.com; r incl breakfast US$25-70;
ais) Few people tend to stay near the
falls, preferring to bed down on nearby islands. However, this resort is pretty good
value compared with the higher end options
on Don Khon. Rooms include rain showers, satellite TV and air-con, luxuries on the
islands, plus riverview balconies. There’s a
swimming pool with views to the river and a
six-hole golf course. It is meant to be a ninehole eventually, but things are upside down
for the moment. It is about 3km north of
Khon Phapheng.
There are lots of local stalls and restaurants
beside the falls. Khamphao Restaurant (%020-240
7704; mains 20,000-40,000K) served a fine feast on
our visit and comes highly recommended.
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C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • S i P h a n D o n ( F o u r T h o u s a n d I s l a n d s ) 297
GETTING THERE & AWAY
Most people book their trip through a guesthouse to go to see the waterfalls, often taking
in both the falls and dolphins. If you’re making the journey independently, it’s best to get
to Ban Nakasang and take a sǎwngthǎew from
there. From Ban Nakasang to Khon Phapheng
Falls you can hire a motorcycle taxi for about
40,000K or a jumbo for 100,000K (this is a
return fare for the whole jumbo and should
THE SOUTHERN SWING
The southern swing is a motorbike or bicycle trip starting in Pakse and taking in the Bolaven
Plateau and other southern provinces, see Map p266. By motorbike it can take anywhere from
three days to as long as you like, depending on how fast you go and how often you stop.
The route we’ve laid out here takes five days but this is only a guide – everything about it
is as flexible as you like. On a bicycle, doing it in reverse is a good idea. Distances are fairly
accurate, if not exact (we didn’t trust our bike’s odometer). Most roads are sealed, and those
that are not are in relatively good condition, meaning 110cc bikes are fine. Read the boxed
text on p342 before you go.
Day 1 – Pakse to Tat Lo
Head south out of Pakse and up toward the plateau, keeping straight on at the bus station. After
about 20km turn left (north) at the junction (labelled Lak 21) of routes 16 and 20, and go another
17km or so to Utayan Bajiang Champasak (Phasoume Resort, p301 which is good for lunch.
Continue on Rte 20 towards Tat Lo (p301) and look for the Katu village with its textile market.
Day 2 – Tat Lo to Attapeu
It’s easy to spend two nights in Tat Lo, but if not then head about 28km up the road for a look
around Salavan (p303). If that doesn’t appeal, go just 4km to Ban Beng and turn right on the
road to Tha Taeng. This 30km-road climbs up onto the Bolaven Plateau through Katu and Alak
villages. Look carefully and you’ll see coffins stacked beneath buildings, and perhaps traditional
graves in small clearings in the forest. The dead are always buried in the forest, and usually with
a significant possession; in one case we saw a child’s bicycle atop a grave, in another a farmer’s
hoe. Continue south on the 46km sealed road to Sekong (p306), which can be a useful lunch
stop. The smooth 77km road from Sekong to Attapeu (p308) goes past a couple of smaller
waterfalls, though there are plenty of those later on.
You could spend a few days exploring this province; check out the options on p310.
Day 4 – Attapeu to Paksong
We absolutely loved this ride, but would have loved it even more if we’d left Attapeu earlier. Do
that (before 10am), and head 47km north on Rte 16 to Ban Bengkhua Kham. Top up your tank
and check your odometer here before heading up the beautiful, shaded road through pristine
jungle. You won’t see many people, but the few Laven we saw included cheroot-sucking women
in sǐn (sarongs), and a couple of guys with unfeasibly long rifles slung over their shoulders with
dead birds hanging from the end. After about 16km look for a waterfall in the distance to the
north, and at 18km for the awesome but unsigned Nam Tok Katamtok (p307). Continue uphill
and at about 27km you’re on the Bolaven Plateau. Several villages dot this road towards Paksong,
the last 15km of which is partly sealed but badly potholed. There is affordable accommodation
in Paksong (p299) or smarter lodgings at Tat Fan (p298). The distance between Ban Bengkhua
Kham and Paksong is 71km. Or you can push on to Pakse if time is tight.
Day 5 – Paksong & around
Check out some of the waterfalls (p300), take a trek from Tat Fan and drink some decent coffee
(p299). And that’s it – you’re pretty much back in Pakse.
SOUTHERN LAOS
Day 3 – Around Attapeu
298 C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • B o l a v e n P l a t e a u
include at least two hours for taking in the
atmosphere at the falls).
SOUTHERN LAOS
BOLAVEN PLATEAU
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Spreading across the northeast of Champasak
Province into Salavan and Sekong, the fertile
Bolaven Plateau (sometimes spelt Bolovens,
known in Lao as Phu Phieng Bolaven) is famous for its cool climate, dramatic waterfalls,
fertile soil and high-grade coffee plantations. It’s also known for being one of the
most heavily bombed theatres of the Second
Indochina War.
The area wasn’t farmed intensively until
the French started planting coffee, rubber
trees and bananas in the early 20th century.
Many of the French planters left following
independence in the 1950s and the rest followed as US bombardment became unbearable in the late ’60s. Controlling the Bolaven
Plateau was considered strategically vital to
both the Americans and North Vietnamese, as
evidenced by the staggering amount of UXO
(unexploded ordnance) still lying around.
The slow process of clearing UXO continues, but in areas where it has been cleared,
both local farmers and larger organisations
are busy cultivating coffee (see the boxed text,
p300). Other local products include fruit, cardamom and rattan.
The largest ethnic group on the plateau
is the Laven (Bolaven means ‘home of the
Laven’). Several other Mon-Khmer ethnic
groups, including the Alak, Katu, Ta-oy
(Tahoy) and Suay, also live on the plateau.
Katu and Alak villages are distinctive because
they arrange their palm-and-thatch houses
in a circle. One unique Katu custom is the
carving of wooden caskets for each member of
the household well in advance of an expected
death. The coffins are stored beneath homes
or rice sheds until needed.
Among other tribes, the best elephant handlers are said to be the animistic-shamanistic
Suay (who call themselves Kui). Elephants
were used extensively for clearing land and
moving timber, although working elephants
are a rare sight these days.
The Alak, Katu and Laven are distinctive
for the face tattoos of their women, a custom
slowly dying out as Lao influence in the area
increases.
Several Katu and Alak villages can be visited
along the road between Pakse and Paksong
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THE KATU & ALAK BUFFALO
SACRIFICE
The Katu and Alak are well known in Laos
for an annual water buffalo sacrifice (usually
performed on a full moon in March) in homage to the village spirit. The number of buffaloes sacrificed – typically from one to four
animals – depends on their availability and
the bounty of the previous year’s agricultural
harvest. During the ceremony, the men of
the village don wooden masks, hoist spears
and wooden shields, then dance around the
buffaloes in the centre of the circle formed
by their houses. After a prescribed period
of dancing the men converge on the buffaloes and spear them to death. The meat
is divided among the villagers and each
household places a piece in a basket on a
pole in front of their house as a spirit offering.
at the western edge of the plateau, and along
the laterite road that descends steadily from
Muang Tha Taeng (That Heng) on the plateau
to Beng, in Salavan Province. There are also a
few within walking distance of Tat Lo (p301),
and on Rte 20. In Lao Ngam (not to be confused with Muang Lao Ngam on the road to
Salavan), around 40km east of Pakse, is a large
day market frequented by many tribal groups.
The plateau has several spectacular waterfalls, including Tat Fan, a few kilometres west
of Paksong, and Tat Lo on Rte 20 to Salavan.
Check out www.bolaven.com for some photos
of the various waterfalls around the plateau.
Tat Fan & Dong Hua Sao NPA
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Tat Fan is one of the most spectacular waterfalls in Laos. The twin streams of the Huay
Bang Lieng plunge out of dense forest and
tumble down more than 120m. Tat Fan (pronounced tàat fáan) is at the edge of the 1100sq-km Dong Hua Sao NPA and the walking
trails around here provide a good way to get
a taste of the park. Dong Hua Sao is reputedly
home to a small population of tigers who are
said to munch through the occasional hunter,
although the chances of actually seeing one
are pretty much zero. You’re more likely to
see monkeys, large butterflies and, in the wet
season, rare hornbills.
Tat Fan is 800m south of Rte 23 – look for
the signs at Km 38. A path leads down to the
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SLEEPING & EATING
Tad Fane Resort (%020-5553 1400; www.tadfane.com;
s/d/fam incl breakfast US$30/32/40) These attractive
wooden bungalows sit atop a cliff overlooking
the falls, although only the two larger family rooms actually have a clear view of Tat
Fan. All have a verandah and attached bathroom, but there is no fan or air-con due to
cool nights. Ageing a little, they are still very
atmospheric. The restaurant (mains 20,000
to 50,000K) has great views and serves sandwiches and tasty Lao and Thai food. In the
high season (November to February) it pays
to book ahead, and to pack something warm
from Pakse.
E-TU Resort (%020-276 9769; www.waterfallet
upaksong.com; r incl breakfast US$45) Alright, so it’s
not strictly Tat Fan, but it’s just a few kilometres down the road near Tat Etu and is
signposted around the Km 35 mark. Set in
the heart of a coffee and tea plantation, the
bungalows are the smartest accommodation
in the Bolaven area with polished wooden
floors and striking Lao textiles. The nearby
waterfall is easier to access than Tat Fan and
swimming is possible.
Paksong & Around
Paksong, Laos’s coffee capital, may not be
much to look at, most of it having been obliterated in a storm of bombs during the Second
Indochina War, but it boasts a temperate climate thanks to its altitude of 1300m. It is an
affordable Bolaven base from which to explore
the plateau, has a mildly interesting market
and is refreshingly cool.
INFORMATION
The best place to seek out information on
Paksong and its surrounding coffee plantations and waterfalls is Ban Won (Rte 16; W), also
known as Koffie’s Coffee. There’s currently no
sign but look out for the free wi-fi sign…yes,
this is the only place in Paksong with internet.
Run by a Dutch coffee aficionado, who is appropriately nicknamed Koffie, and his Laven
wife, this is the place to sample fresh coffee
and green tea (5000K a cuppa) fresh from
the plateau. Coffee workshops and plantation
tours are available and start from 50,000K per
person. For more on Paksong, visit the useful
website www.paksong.info.
COFFEE
Coffee trees of varying sizes blanket the
Bolaven Plateau and you can walk through
them on the easy afternoon treks from Tat
Fan. Those wanting to get closer to the action
can head to Phuoi (Phuouy), which has become
the unofficial headquarters for Jhai Coffee
Farmers Co-op (see the boxed text, p300).
SOUTHERN LAOS
top of the falls and affords fine views, though
this is perilously slippery in the wet season
and is often impassable. An easier viewing
point is Tad Fane Resort (p299), a jungle lodge
that looks down onto the falls from the top
of a cliff opposite. The resort has a couple
of professional English-speaking guides who
can arrange fairly easy half- and full-day treks
around the edge of the NPA. These might take
in Laven and Katu villages, coffee plantations,
and almost always at least one other waterfall.
A half-day trek costs US$3.50 to US$5.50,
depending on numbers, and a full-day is
US$10 including lunch. When possible, the
morning trek leaves at 8.30am and takes the
steep descent to the top of Tat Fan, returning
about 12.30pm. The 1pm trek is usually more
of a stroll and swim, walking through coffee
plantations to 17m-high Tat Cham Pi (which
means Small Banana Waterfall, although
no one could tell us why). The large pool
below is perfect for swimming, and private
enough that women can usually get down to
their swimwear without offending the locals.
Adventure sandals are appropriate in the dry
season but boots are better in the wet to deter
leeches. As one guide told us, ‘the flip-flop is
not possible’.
Rafting and kayaking trips are possible
on Huay Bang Lieng during the wet season
from July to November. For details speak
to Green Discovery or Xplore-Asia in Pakse
(both p268).
Transport between Pakse and Paksong
or beyond stops 800m north of Tat Fan (see
p300 for details). When you arrive there’s a
small fee (5000K) for entrance and parking
if you’re not staying or eating at the resort.
The popularity of Tat Fan with day-tripping
Thai tourists has also prompted local residents to establish a small market in the car
park. Some of the goods on sale are innocent
enough, such as coffee and green tea grown
locally. However, please don’t buy the orchids,
which come straight from Dong Hua Sao.
Local guides report that orchids are now only
marginally easier to spot than tigers in the area
around Tat Fan.
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300 C HA M PA S A K P R O V I N C E • • B o l a v e n P l a t e a u
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KĄA-FÉH LÁO (LAO COFFEE)
SOUTHERN LAOS
The high, flat ground of the Bolaven Plateau is ideal for growing coffee and the region produces
some of the best and most expensive beans on earth. Arabica, Arabica Typica and Robusta are
grown, much of it around the ‘coffee town’ of Paksong.
The French introduced coffee to the Bolaven Plateau in the early 1900s and the Arabica Typica
shipped home became known as the ‘champagne of coffee’. Plans to make the plateau a major
coffee-growing centre died with the carpet bombing of the ‘60s and ‘70s.
Business began to pick up in the 1990s and was dominated by a few plantations and companies, the largest being Pakse-based Dao Heung. For the farmers, however, earning less than
US$0.50 per kg wasn’t really improving their living standards. These businesses still dominate
today but a fair-trade project aimed at empowering small-scale farmers is gathering steam. The
Jhai Coffee Farmer Cooperative (www.jhaicoffee.com) is a 500-member group formed in 2004 with
help from the California-based Jhai Foundation and Thanksgiving Coffee in the US. Members
come from 12 villages and several ethnic groups living mainly along the rough road running
south from Rte 23 to Ban Nong Luang. Machinery has been bought, and cooperative farmers
have been trained in modern cultivation methods to maximise the quality of the beans. And
with Fairtrade certification the farmers are guaranteed US$1.36 per kg, more than three times
what they made selling to larger wholesalers. However, when coffee prices climb above the fair
trade price, such as to US$1.70 in 2007, farmers can choose to sell to other buyers if they want
to guarantee the best price.
Lao Mountain Coffee (www.laomountain.com), a Vientiane-based roasting company, purchases
from the Jhai Cooperative and their beans are available in Pakse, Vientiane and Luang Prabang.
To get to Phuoi head east on Rte 23 for about
1.5km and look for the big sign pointing right
(south) down a dirt road to Ban Nong Luang.
This spine-jarring road runs to the southern
edge of the plateau and is home to the 12
mainly Laven villages that make up the Jhai
Coffee Farmers Co-op. Phuoi is 4km along,
but more adventurous souls with a few spare
hours might want to continue another 7km to
Ban Nong Luang. From this village it’s possible
to take a local guide and walk to two fairly
impressive waterfalls, the seven-tiered Tat Tha
Jet and Tat Kameud. The return trip takes a while
so start early. If you get stuck, homestays in Ban
Nong Luang are possible. Note that no one in
the village speaks English, but they should understand ‘homestay’ if you want the experience.
WATERFALLS
As well as Tat Fan, numerous breathtaking
other cascades drop off the Bolaven Plateau
within striking distance of Paksong. Most are
marked by a blue sign with a painted representation of the cataract in question. Tat Yuang
(admission 5000K) is among the most impressive,
with its twin torrents falling about 40m and
flowing into lush jungle. Tat Yuang is hugely
popular with day-trippers from Pakse and
Thailand who like to picnic at the top, so
getting here early is a good idea. It’s OK to
swim at the bottom, but women should wear
a sarong.
To get there, follow the signs right (south)
off Rte 23 at Km 40 and go a further 2km.
A scenic way to Tat Fan from here is the
45-minute walk along a beautiful forest trail
that starts beside the bathrooms at Tat Yuang.
SLEEPING & EATING
Savanna Guesthouse (%020-5579 0613; r 70,000100,000K) A friendly spot near a pretty pond,
the owner speaks some English. Rooms are
modern and smart, including spiffy bathrooms and satellite TV. It is tucked away behind the market.
Paksong Phuthavada Hotel (%030-534 8081; r from
600B; a) Visible from all over town, this hotel
sits atop a hillside overlooking Paksong. Sweep
up the grand driveway and into a 600B room,
which will be spacious and sparkling clean.
Borlaven Restaurant (%020-5583 6326; mains
15,000-40,000K) Set in a thatched house with
pretty flowers, this local restaurant has a small
menu of Laotian food. Approaching town
from the north, this is the first place in town,
located on the left-hand side.
GETTING THERE & AWAY
Buses and sǎwngthǎew between Paksong
and Pakse’s southern (Km 8) bus terminal
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leave frequently between about 8am and 4pm
(15,000K, 90 minutes). For Tat Fan, get off
at Km 38 and follow the signs to the falls
and resort.
Utayan Bajiang Champasak
(Phasoume Resort)
GETTING THERE & AWAY
There is no direct public transport to
Phasoume. Take any transport heading up Rte
20 towards Salavan and get off at a turn-off
400m after the Houy Cham Pa bridge, about
36km from Pakse. Follow signs for Phasoume
Falls and it is a 1.5km walk.
SALAVAN PROVINCE
Like Sekong and Attapeu Provinces to the
south, Salavan is notable as much for its remoteness as any traditional tourism draws.
Salavan (also spelt Saravan and Saravane) is
not on the way to anywhere and upcountry
roads remain some of the worst in Laos, but
it is these very qualities and the lure of tough
travel that have begun to attract a few hardy
visitors looking to get well-and-truly off the
beaten track.
There are a handful of attractions. The
province straddles the northern edge of the
Bolaven Plateau and Tat Lo, just 30km from
Salavan town, is an attractive village near
some waterfalls and the best place to base
yourself. Beyond waterfalls, however, the ethnic diversity of the region is the main lure.
While more than half of the population of
Salavan is ethnically Lao (Loum and Soung),
none are native to this area. The remainder
of the 350,000 inhabitants belong to relatively
obscure Mon-Khmer groups, including the
Ta-oy (Tahoy), Lavai, Katang, Alak, Laven,
Ngai, Tong, Pako, Kanay, Katu and Kado.
Almost half the province is covered by
natural forest but getting into the three protected areas is really tough. Phu Xieng Thong
NPA is accessible from Pakse (see p275), but
for now the Se Ban Nuan NPA near to Rte 13 and
particularly the Se Xap NPA in the far east have
no tourist infrastructure whatsoever – in fact,
infrastructure of any kind is extremely limited.
Just about every major branch of the Ho
Chi Minh Trail cut through Salavan at some
point and UXO remains a serious problem.
While Salavan town no longer has piles of
rusting war detritus waiting for scrap merchants, plenty of towns to the north and east
do. Clearance teams head out almost every
day to continue the painstaking task of finding
and neutralising these weapons of war, and
expect to be busy for years to come. Despite
plenty of interest from travellers keen to
walk part of the trail, so far no such operation exists.
TAT LO
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Tat Lo (pronounced tàat láw) has the atmosphere of a backpacker retreat with cheap
accommodation, an attractive setting and
plenty of diversions, but very few backpackers.
And herein lies its charm. Waterfalls are the
town’s raison d’être and they give it a serenity
that sees many visitors stay longer than they
planned. If you’re wanting to explore deeper
into the province, Tat Lo is the ideal base.
The town is a one-street affair, with most
accommodation just east of the bridge. A
community guides office here has information
on nine different treks to surrounding sights
and nearby Ngai villages (starting at 45,000K
SOUTHERN LAOS
A Thai-owned ‘ecoresort’, Utayan Bajiang
Champasak (%031-251 294; off Rte 20; entry 5000k per
person) 38km northwest of Pakse is scattered
through a stretch of thick jungle either side of
the small but beautiful Phasoume Waterfall.
It’s possible to stay here in one of the 14
Swiss Family Robinson–style tree houses
(250,000K), but they’re not great value compared with Tat Lo. More sensible is to drop by
the restaurant (mains 20,000 to 40,000K) for
a tasty Thai lunch, most likely accompanied
by busloads of Thai tourists.
The resort itself might seem to be more a
homage to big dead trees than to live trees –
they’re sliced and diced into chairs, tables,
beams, posts, floor timbers, stepping stones
and just about any other use you can imagine.
However, we’re assured that the tonnes of timber used to build this place were taken from
trees rejected by local logging operations.
An appealing elevated jungle walk leads
to a ‘museum village’ where families of Katu,
Nge and Laven attempt to entertain visitors.
The families seem happy enough, and you can
even stay with them for 70,000K per person,
but for us the whole experience is way too
contrived – the museum lifestyle just feels
surreal.
S A L AVA N P R O V I N C E • • Ta t L o 301
302 S A L AVA N P R O V I N C E • • Ta t L o
per person for a four-hour trip) and is where
you get hooked up with a guide. It’s run by
Soulideth of Tim Guesthouse, who speaks
great English and is a mine of information
on nearby attractions. He also offers internet
access (per min 500K) and can arrange motorbike
hire (80,000K per day).
Sights & Activities
WATERFALLS
SOUTHERN LAOS
There are actually three waterfalls on this
stretch of river. The nearest to town is Tat
Hang, which can be seen from the bridge
and some guesthouses. It’s possible to swim
here; just go where the local kids go. Note
that during the dry season, dam authorities
upstream release water in the evening, more
than doubling the waterfall volume. Check
out what time the release occurs so you’re
not standing at the top of the waterfall then,
a potentially fatal error.
Tat Lo, about 700m upriver, is a little bigger but probably won’t knock your socks off.
To get there, cross the bridge and walk up
through Saise Guest House, keeping to the
path by the river. The spectacular third cascade is Tat Suong. It’s about 10km out and accessible by motorbike or bicycle. Head uphill
past the turn-off to Tadlo Lodge, turn right
at the power station and left where the road
ends. Look (hard) for the sign pointing left to
Ban Sanumnay and follow it to a parking area.
It’s not far from here to the stunning and precipitous top of the falls…don’t get too close.
ELEPHANT RIDES
Tadlo Lodge offers rides on its two female
elephants (85,000K per elephant, 90 minutes). The typical ride plods through forest,
villages and streams full of slippery rocks you
wouldn’t dream of crossing on foot. Each elephant can carry two people and they depart
from just outside the guides’ office at 8am,
10am, 1pm and 3pm. You can book at the
guides’ office or Tad Lo Resort itself.
Sleeping & Eating
Palamei Guesthouse (%020-333 9365; r 25,000-50,000K)
This place may not be on the river, but it
makes up for it with friendly service and a
relaxed vibe. There are two large bungalows at
the back of the compound with ricefield views
and there is even a little lean-to kitchen if you
fancy trying your hand at Lao cooking. Plus
free transfers to the main road.
lonelyplanet.com
Tim Guesthouse & Restaurant (%211 885; soulidet@
gmail.com; r 40,000-60,000K; i) The simple rooms
here all have shared bathroom and no views,
but what they lack in luxuries is offset by
atmosphere. English- and French-speaking
Soulideth is a mine of local information and
the restaurant (mains 6000k to 35,000K),
serves the usual range of travellers’ favourites plus seasonal specialities. There is a book
exchange, and opposite the guesthouse is a
classroom (built by Soulideth) where local
kids learn computer skills.
Siphaseth Guest House & Restaurant (%211 890;
r 40,000-70,000K) In a great location by the bridge,
the bungalows have a good garden location
and include bathrooms. Solid rooms in the
newer concrete building come with hot water
and river views. The restaurant (mains 5000
to 25,000K) is the ideal place to have a sundowner Beerlao.
oSaise Guest House (%211 886; r US$8-35;
a) In lush gardens on the west bank of the
river, this place sprawls from Tat Hang to Tat
Lo. Rooms range from cheap ‘tribe bungalows’
for US$8 to sophisticated air-conditioned
bungalows further upstream. The US$20
bungalows with air-con, hot water and views
of the falls are a good deal. Check whether or
not breakfast is included. The restaurant has
been refurbished here and is beautifully set
amid forest with views to Tat Hang. At night
a spotlight picks out the falls making for a
most romantic setting. Good Lao and Thai
food, plus some spirits and mixers if you are
feeling the urge.
Tadlo Lodge (%211 889; www.tadlolodge.com; bungalows s/d incl breakfast US$39/44) This long-running
lodge has a prime position straddling the river,
overlooking the lower waterfall. The attractive
bungalows have balconies and clean hot-water
bathrooms, but are a touch overpriced when
compared with the Saise. The pavilion-style
restaurant (mains 25,000 to 100,000K) offers
the best selection of European food in Tat
Lo, but it was a case of ‘sorry, no cooking’
during our visit.
Other options include the following:
Mama Pap Guesthouse (r 25,000K) Set amid the
village like a homestay, these basic bungalows are tended
by friendly Mama Pap who promises ‘big eat, small kips’ at
her roadside restaurant.
Sailomyen Guest House (r from 25,000K) Next door to
Siphaseth, this place has simple fan-conditioned huts with
balcony in a pretty riverside location. The restaurant has
cheap meals with nothing costing more than 15,000K.
lonelyplanet.com
S A L AVA N P R O V I N C E • • S a l a v a n 303
Getting There & Away
Just say ‘Tat Lo’ at Pakse’s southern bus station and you’ll be pointed in the right direction. It costs 25,000K and there are usually five
or more buses a day. Tat Lo is 86km northeast
of Pakse off the road to Salavan; you’ll be
dropped at Ban Khoua Set. There might be a
motorbike or tuk-tuk (10,000K) to shuttle you
the last 1.8km. Otherwise, it’s an uphill walk.
If you’re heading to Paksong, get to Ban
Beng, and catch a bus coming from Salavan.
It might go all the way to Paksong or change
buses at Tha Taeng; either way, allow a few
hours.
SALAVAN
¦¾ì½¸×$
isn’t enough of a draw and instead they sensibly opt to stay at nearby Tat Lo.
Information
Lao Development Bank (h8.30am-4.30pm Mon-Fri), a
little west of the market, will change US dollars or Thai baht. The post office (h8am-4.30pm)
is around the corner from the market and
next door is a telecom office (h8am-5pm Mon-Fri).
The Provincial Tourism Office (%211 528; Ground
fl; h8am-noon & 1-4pm Mon-Fri), signposted on
the main drag through town, is where the
French- and English-speaking Mr Bounthone
Sinachak resides and is worth a visit if you
plan on heading further into the province.
Sleeping & Eating
%034 / pop 25,000
Thipphaphone Guesthouse (%211 063; r 40,00070,000K; a), Located near the market, this
friendly guesthouse is set in an old wooden
family house and the rooms are fine, if uninspiring. The wonderfully welcoming manager
doesn’t speak any English.
Phoufa Hotel (%030-537 0799; r 50,000-140,000K;
a) This could be the main attraction of a
visit to Salavan. Located on the road from Tat
Lo, this pretty garden compound is home to
the best digs in town. The 31 rooms include
attractive bungalows with air-con and satellite
TV. Take a cheaper room and you’ll have to
forsake such luxuries. The grounds include a
chilling mound of war remnants and UXO
from around the province.
Follow a short dirt road at the south end of
town to discover a fish restaurant, the Hong Lek
A
INFORMATION
Lao Development Bank............1 C2
Post Office...............................2 C1
Provincial Tourism Office.........3 C2
Telecom Office......................(see 2)
1
Ὀ
Ὀ
0
0
SALAVAN
B
C
D
Provincial
Hospital
SLEEPING
Thipphaphone Guest House.... 4 C2
EATING
Hong Lek.................................5 D2
TRANSPORT
Bus Terminal............................6 A2
500 m
0.3 miles
Open
Field
2
n
Se
Wat Kong
Police
School
1
Market
3
To Khong Sedon (75km);
Tahoy; Toumlan
2
Rte 20
Petrol
Station
6
To Phoufa Hotel (3km);
Tat Lo (30km);
Tha Taeng (49km);
Pakse (124km)
Disused
Airstrip
4
5
Do
SOUTHERN LAOS
Once a Champasak kingdom outpost known
as Muang Mam and inhabited mostly by
Mon-Khmer minorities, it was renamed
Salavan (Sarawan in Thai) by the Siamese in
1828. The provincial capital of Salavan was all
but destroyed in the Indochina War, when it
bounced back and forth between Royal Lao
Army and Pathet Lao occupation. The rebuilt
town is a collection of brick and wood buildings, though if you look carefully you’ll find
more old buildings around than you might
expect and it’s not entirely without charm.
The town sits within a bend of the Se Don,
which eventually meets the Mekong at Pakse.
Functionally, Salavan serves mainly as a supply centre for farmers in surrounding districts.
For most travellers, the backwater atmosphere
304 S E K O N G P R O V I N C E
(mains 15,000-35,000K; hdinner), on the banks of the
Se Don. It serves superb barbecued fish, fresh
vegetables and icy Beerlao. Bring mosquito
repellent and a Lao phrasebook.
Getting There & Away
BUS & SǍWNGTHǍEW
For buses from Pakse see p273. Salavan’s
bus terminal is 2km west of the town centre,
where Rte 20 meets Rte 15. Buses for Pakse
(25,000K, three hours, 124km) are scheduled to leave at 7.30am and 10am. Buses or
sǎwngthǎew leave for Sekong (20,000K, two
to three hours, 93km) at 7.45am and 1.30pm.
These go through Tha Taeng (10,000K, one to
1½ hours, 49km).
Lot dai sǎan, trucks with wooden cabins
built on the back and seats sans legroom
crammed inside, are the only beasts capable
of tackling the roads north, east and directly
west of Salavan. They run along rough Rte
15 to Khong Sedon (25,000K, three hours,
75km), on Rte 13, where you can pick up other
transport to Savannakhet.
In the dry season they also take on the potholed stretches of earth that masquerade as
roads running to Tahoy and Toumlan.
AROUND SALAVAN
SOUTHERN LAOS
Approach upcountry Salavan Province in the
spirit of adventure, in part because getting
to most destinations will be an adventure in
itself.
Nong Bua
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The lake of Nong Bua, near the source of the Se
Don about 15km east of town along a seasonal
road, is famous for its dwindling population
of Siamese crocodiles (khàe in Lao). There
aren’t many left (two or three, apparently),
but the tourism office can help organise a
day trip to Nong Bua by bicycle. A guide and
bicycle cost 40,000K per day each. Chances
of actually seeing the crocs are slim. Instead,
look out for 1588m-high Phu Katae nearby.
Toumlan & Rte 23
About 50km north of Salavan along bumpy
Rte 23 is the Katang village of Toumlan. The
area is famous for its silk weavings and Lapup
festival (see the boxed text, p298) usually held
in late February. The town is very poor but
interesting both from a cultural point of view
and because of its position on the Ho Chi
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Minh Trail. UXO continues to pose a threat
here while also providing income from the
sale of scrap.
North of Toumlan, Rte 23 heads towards
Rte 9 and Muang Phin, via the site of Prince
Souvanaphong’s Bridge, named because it was
built by the ‘Red Prince’ Souphanouvong
(who was a trained engineer) in 1942.
Unfortunately the bridge was blown up in
1968 and has never been rebuilt. In the dry
season it should be possible to cross here with
a small motorbike and continue on to Muang
Phin on Rte 9, the journey between Salavan
and Muang Phin taking about eight hours,
sometimes much longer.
Tahoy & the Ho Chi Minh Trail
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Northeast along Rte 15, which can be impassable for days during the wet season, is
Tahoy (Ta-oy), a centre for the Ta-oy ethnic
group, who number around 30,000 spread
across the eastern areas of Salavan and Sekong
Provinces. The Ta-oy live in forested mountain valleys at altitudes between 300m and
1000m, often in areas shared with Katu and
other Mon-Khmer groups. Like many MonKhmer groups in southern Laos, they practise
a combination of animism and shamanism;
during village ceremonies, the Ta-oy put up
diamond-patterned bamboo totems to warn
outsiders not to enter.
Tahoy town was an important marker
on the Ho Chi Minh Trail and two major
branches lead off Rte 15 nearby. If you want to
see war junk ask a local to take you; you might
need to draw pictures of bombs or tanks to get
your message across. If you come to Tahoy
you’ll likely have to stay. The government lets
out rooms (30,000K) in a simple building.
A sǎwngthǎew leaves Salavan for Tahoy
(30,000K, four to eight hours, 84km) at 11am
every second day in the dry season.
SEKONG PROVINCE
Stretching from near the eastern edge of
the Bolaven Plateau to the Vietnam border,
this rugged and remote province is dotted
with waterfalls, dissected by the impressive
Se Kong and dominated in the east by the
lesser-known Dak Cheung Plateau, which
rises 1500m above sea level. With the massive cliff walls of the southern Se Xap NPA
lonelyplanet.com
(some are said to be more than 1000m high)
and several sizable mountains in the province,
Sekong has the potential to become an outdoor adventurers’ paradise.
Alas, not yet. The province is among the
poorest in Laos and a combination of terrible
road infrastructure, virtually no facilities for
tourism and a landscape that remains unsafe
due to UXO dropped on the Ho Chi Minh
Trail decades ago, mean much of it is offlimits to all but the most intrepid.
That’s not to say there’s no reason to come.
There are waterfalls on the Se Nam Noy (Nam
Noy River) and the breathtaking Nam Tok
Katamtok waterfall (p307), which plunges more
than 100m. The other reason to come is the
S E K O N G P R O V I N C E 305
people. By population Sekong is the smallest of
Laos’s provinces, but among its 90,000 inhabitants are people from 14 different tribal groups,
making it the most ethnically diverse province
in the country. The vast majority are from MonKhmer tribes, with the Alak, Katu, Taliang, Yae
and Nge the largest groups. These total more
than 75% of the population. Other groups
include the Pacoh, Chatong, Suay (Souei),
Katang and Ta-oy. These diverse groups are
not Buddhists, so you won’t see many wats.
Rather, their belief systems mix animism and
ancestor worship. The Katu and Taliang tend
towards monogamy but, unusually in a part
of the world so traditionally male dominated,
tolerate polyandry (two or more husbands).
WE’RE ON A ROAD TO NOWHERE Nick Ray
SOUTHERN LAOS
It was August 2008 and the rains were already falling hard in Laos. I had been recruited by the
BBC as the line producer for the popular Top Gear show, in readiness for the program’s Vietnam
special. Vietnam special? Quite what was I doing in Laos, you might ask? Well, the original brief
was not motorbikes, but old cars (American, French, Russian), and the provisional route included
both Cambodia and Laos. So I found myself in Laos trying to buy some old bangers and plot a
challenging route for Clarkson and co.
Hooking up with fellow Lonely Planet author Andrew Burke, we decided to head south on our
250cc dirt bikes from Muang Phin to Salavan on abandoned Rte 23 (note the use of the word
abandoned). It started so well. The beautiful route skirted Dong Phu Vieng NPA, and we made
it to the Se Pon in no time at all. With Prince Souvanaphong’s Bridge duly photographed, we
crossed the river in rickety canoes and continued on our way. Then it all started to go wrong.
The trails kept dead-ending in ricefields and we couldn’t find any locals to lead the way.
Eventually we found the route, but time was ticking and it was a tough jungle ride. Four river
crossings later, my battery was flooded and my bike had given up. We tried push starts, but in
the end we had to abandon it in the forest for a later rescue. We continued on one bike until
around 8pm, when we encountered a freshly fallen tree blocking the trail. It was too dark to find
a workaround, so despondently we had to turn back. We ended up sleeping with a Lao family
who we woke up around 10pm. They kindly plied us with sticky rice and lào-láo (rice whisky).
The next morning was a mission to recover the second bike. Towing motorbikes is a delicate
art, particularly when the ‘road’ in question is a rocky, muddy jungle path. The person being
towed can’t blink. They simply have to follow the lead bike. If the lead rider hits a big rock, then
bad luck, so does the rider being towed. Any deviation from the course and both riders will end
up on the floor. We made it back to the river in one piece, despite a rather dramatic accident
near the Se Pon. I ducked to avoid a branch at the last minute. My bike went right, Andrew’s
bike went left and he flew off the embankment like Superman. Luckily the bike didn’t follow,
and he managed to miss the rocks. We survived a wobbly crossing back over the Se Pon and
eventually made it to Savannakhet later that night.
Incidentally, the Top Gear shoot eventually took place in October in Vietnam only and we made
a madcap dash from Saigon to Hanoi in 10 days: Jeremy Clarkson on a Vespa, Richard Hammond
on a Minsk and James May on a Honda Cub. Eventually arriving in Halong Bay, they converted
the bikes to amphibious vehicles and became the first tourists to explore the bay by motorbike.
I drove the whole length of the country on a customised Ural bike with a raised camera seat on
the back to give the shooters maximum safety and comfort. I was right next to Clarkson when he
came off his Vespa and can dispel all rumours at long last – it was a genuine accident and not
staged. I mean, come on, tiny Vespas just aren’t designed to be ridden by someone who’s 6 ft 7 in.
306 S E K O N G P R O V I N C E • • S e k o n g ( M u a n g L a m a m )
Note that in the wet season travelling anywhere beyond Rte 16 can be difficult.
SEKONG (MUANG LAMAM)
À§¡º¤(À´Ûº¤ì½´¿)
%038 / pop 15,000
Most visitors pass through Sekong, as the
choice of accommodation is limited and the
nearby attractions can usually be incorporated
into a journey south to Attapeu. Carved out
of the wilderness in the mid-1980s, the unnecessarily sprawling town is set on a basic
grid with government buildings in the centre
surrounded by areas of concrete, wooden and
wood-and-thatch stilt homes. There are no
street names.
The Se Kong wraps around the town on
the southern and eastern sides, while the
Bolaven Plateau rises precipitously to the
west. At the town market, tribes from outlying areas trade cloth for Vietnamese goods
while others sell an ever-dwindling number
of birds, lizards and small mammals hunted
in nearby forests.
Drop by UXO Lao (h8am-5pm), opposite the
Ministry of Finance office just west of the
market. These guys have been clearing UXO
for years and have a mildly interesting display
of rusting munitions and weaponry in their
yard. Visitors are welcome.
SOUTHERN LAOS
Information & Orientation
Sekong sits on a grid between Rte 16 in the
north and the Se Kong to the south. Almost
everything you need is in the streets just east
of the market. The only real information offered here is in the Pha Thib Restaurant menu,
which has stacks of information on local ethnic groups, villages and handicrafts, most of it
prepared by a UN Development Programme
(UNDP) caseworker.
The Lao Development Bank (h9.30am-4pm MonFri) is not far from the market and can change
Thai baht and US dollars cash for kip only.
The post office (h8am-noon & 1-5pm Mon-Fri) is at
the other end of this road.
Sleeping & Eating
Woman Fever Kosmet Centre Guesthouse (%0205415 1610; r 30,000K) Opposite the Pha Thib
Restaurant, the simple rooms with share
bathrooms here are very basic, but also very
affordable. We haven’t heard of any guests
catching woman fever; proceeds actually go
to a malaria education group.
lonelyplanet.com
Thida Hotel (%020-233 7801; riverside; r 100,000K;
a) Located on the banks of the Se Kong,
this smart new hotel has little luxuries like
satellite TV, a fridge and slick bathrooms.
The riverside restaurant is arguably the most
salubrious dining venue in town.
Hong Kham Hotel (%211 777; Rte 16; r 125,000K;
a) A big hotel on the main road, the Hong
Kham is quite new, so consequently rooms
are smart, clean and include satellite TV and
bathrooms with hot water. The downstairs
restaurant stays open later than most stalls
around town and has a mix of Lao, Chinese
and Vietnamese dishes.
Pha Thib Restaurant (mains 15,000-35,000K; h7am8pm) Little more than a wooden shack, the
friendly Viet owner cooks up tasty, fresh
dishes, including Lao and Vietnamese favourites. Try the deep-fried fish with vegetables or
sour fish soup. The bathrooms are somewhat
less memorable than the food.
Getting There & Away
Sekong’s dusty/muddy bus station is about
2km northwest of town off Rte 16; a jumbo
there costs about 5000K. Few buses actually
originate in Sekong; instead they stop here between Pakse and Attapeu. Schedules are flexible. For Pakse (30,000K, around four hours,
135km) there is at least one bus (usually 6am)
then occasional buses/sǎwngthǎew coming
through from Attapeu until about 1pm. For
Attapeu (25,000K, two hours, 76km) there is
one dedicated departure at 8am, then every
two hours or so until about 4pm. Transport to
Salavan (25,000K, three hours, 93km) leaves
intermittently from 6am ‘til noon.
For transport from Pakse see p273.
Getting Around
Sekong has a few jumbos, look for them at
the market. Pha Thib Restaurant can rent out
motorbikes for 80,000K per day.
AROUND SEKONG
Off Rte 16 south of Sekong there are several
villages and waterfalls that could be visited as
part of a day trip; you’d have to hire a bicycle
or motorbike in Sekong, or charter a tuk-tuk
or jumbo (about 80,000K). About 3.5km south
of town, turn right along a rough dirt road
immediately after a school. Follow the dirt
road about 2.5km to the relatively ordinary
Tat Hia waterfall. A little further along Rte 16,
another path heads southeast for about 3km
lonelyplanet.com
toward the Se Kong and two Alak villages.
The first is known for its fine sín (traditional
sarongs). Similar villages can be found at the
end of dirt roads leading east 12km and 14km
from Sekong.
The road at Km 14 also leads to Tat Faek.
On the Se Nam Noi not far upriver of the Se
Kong, Tat Faek is about 5m high and there are
two pools in which you can swim. Swimmers
should use the one above the falls, as a
diabolical-sounding puffer fish known as the
pa pao is believed to lurk in the pool below.
Locals report with a sort of gleeful dread how
the evil pa pao can home in on and sink its
razor-sharp teeth into the human penis with
uncanny precision. Admittedly, the women
are more gleeful about this than the men. Tat
Faek is about 1.5km off the road; take the right
fork after about 500m, then turn left another
800m beyond.
At Km 16 a long bridge crosses the Se Nam
Noi and you enter Attapeu Province. Just
south of the bridge a track leads east to Tat Se
Noi, known locally as ‘waterfall of the heads’
(Tat Hua Khon), owing to a WWII episode in
which Japanese soldiers decapitated a number
of Lao soldiers and tossed their heads into
the falls. The falls are about 100m wide and
7m deep.
Nam Tok Katamtok
ATTAPEU PROVINCE
Attapeu is the wild east of Laos. It’s frontier
territory in every sense, with the rugged and
densely forested regions bordering Cambodia
and Vietnam as well-endowed with wildlife
as anywhere in the country. Tigers are still
present in the province, and species as rare
as the clouded leopard roam the more remote
areas. However, this also makes it a rough and
ready province to explore, with little in the
way of information or infrastructure.
In reality, Attapeu is best experienced as
part of a motorbike trip around the southern highlands. Coming here by public bus
is not ideal, as it is difficult to arrange local
transport and guides for further exploration.
Anyone who wants an experienced guide may
need to book a tour through travel companies
based in Pakse (p268). It also offers a road less
travelled for border enthusiasts, as the remote
Phou Keua-Bo Y crossing links Attapeu with
Kontum or Quy Nhon in Vietnam.
The province has hosted an important
trading route since the Chenla period and
Khmer-style brick prasat have been found in
the jungles near the Vietnam border. During
the Lan Xang period the area was known for
being rich in gold and forest products. In
the 16th century, it saw the demise of King
Setthathirat. Historians believe the Lan Xang
regent upset the locals and members of his
court in Vientiane when, on an expedition
to the area, he kidnapped a local woman and
hauled her off to Vientiane. After getting her
pregnant he returned to Attapeu to settle
things down but wound up dead instead. The
town of Saisettha is named after him and he
is believed to be buried under a nearby stupa.
More recent history is just as violent. Every
branch of the Ho Chi Minh Trail ran through
Attapeu and the province was heavily bombed
during the Second Indochina War. Rare pieces
of ordnance are still visible, though most has
been carted off for scrap – the missile launcher
at Pa-am (p310) being the notable exception.
Sealed Rte 18B to the Vietnam border has
brought the Vietnamese back in numbers. In
several new guesthouses and restaurants in the
provincial capital, a Vietnamese phrasebook
will be more useful than a Lao dictionary.
Of the 11 ethnic groups found in Attapeu,
Lavae, Nge and Talieng predominate, with Lao
Loum, Chinese and a fast-growing number
SOUTHERN LAOS
$Õª¡¡½ª¿ª¡
All of the above falls are small fry compared
with the mighty Nam Tok Katamtok. Running
off the Bolaven Plateau, the Huay Katam
drops more than 100m out of thick forest at
what some describe as Laos’s highest waterfall.
And while they may or may not be bigger
than Tat Fan, these falls are easily as impressive because you need to be something of an
explorer to find them.
When you're 31km south of Sekong, turn
west along the laterite road that eventually
leads to Paksong, 71km away. There are actually two falls to be seen from this road. The
first is after 16km, where if you look off to the
north you’ll see a large cascade in the distance.
Nam Tok Katamtok is about 2km further on.
You’ll know you’re getting near when you
cross three bridges and climb a hill, where a
25m-long trail leads back off to the left and
out of the jungle appears this spectacular
drop. There is no sign and both are easy to
miss, so check your odometer and slow down
when approaching.
AT TA P E U P R O V I N C E 307
308 AT TA P E U P R O V I N C E • • A t t a p e u ( S a m a k h i X a i )
of Vietnamese concentrated in the capital.
There are fewer than 20 Buddhist temples in
the entire province.
ATTAPEU (SAMAKHI XAI)
ºñ©ª½¯Û
SOUTHERN LAOS
%036 / pop 19,200
It’s officially known as Muang Samakhi Xai
but even locals seem to find this a mouthful.
The capital of Attapeu Province is set in a
large valley and flanked by the mountains of
the nearby Bolaven Plateau, 1000m above,
and two rivers that meet nearby, the mighty
Se Kong and the smaller Se Kaman. Attapeu
is famed in southern Laos as the ‘garden village’ for its shady lanes and lush flora. While
thoroughly deserved, this reputation is all the
more remarkable given that Attapeu actually
means ‘buffalo shit’ in Mon-Khmer dialects.
Legend has it that when early Lao Loum people arrived they asked the locals what was
the name of their town. In response, the villagers apparently pointed at a nearby pile of
buffalo manure, known locally as itkapu (ait
krapeau in contemporary Khmer). Perhaps
there was some misunderstanding. Maybe the
Lao Loum didn’t like the place or possibly the
villagers were having a laugh. Either way, with
some subsequent adjustment in pronunciation, the town is known as Attapeu.
While Attapeu has little in the way of
‘sights’ it’s not a shitty town as such. Engaging
locals and affordable accommodation make
this a sensible base for exploring the wild east,
a job made simpler by the completion of a
bridge across the Se Kong and Rte 18B (the
only street in town that actually has a name)
to Vietnam.
Information
Attapeu Office of Tourism (%211 056) Recently
relocated to a smart new chalet 200m east of the water
tower, English-speaking Mr Si Thanon Sai (%020-244
0871) is the man in the know. Guides and transport
(motorbike or 4WD) may be available with some notice,
but don’t expect to just rock up.
Internet (Attapeu Palace Hotel; 10,000K per hr;
h7am-10pm) This hotel has one terminal in reception,
plus a wi-fi connection for guests staying near enough to
the lobby.
BCEL (Rte 18A; h8.30am-3.30pm Mon-Fri) Changes US
dollars, euros or Thai baht for kip, plus it has Attapeu’s first
ATM, dispensing a miserly 700,000K at a time.
Lao Telecom (h7am-5pm Mon-Fri)
Post office (h8am-noon & 1-4pm Mon-Fri)
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Sights & Activities
Despite being a largely Lao Loum place,
Attapeu town is not renowned for its Buddhist
temples. The most interesting is Wat Luang
Muang Mai, usually known as Wat Luang,
which was built in 1939 and features some
older monastic buildings with original naga
bargeboards. And that’s about it. The real
sights and activities lie beyond the town.
Sleeping
Souksomphone Guesthouse (%211 046; r 40,00065,000K; a) The place with the mother-ofall hardwood staircases protruding from
the front. The cheaper rooms are cramped
to the point of cells, but the air-con twins
are pretty good value. The manager speaks
some English and can arrange motorbike hire
(80,000K).
Phoutthavong Guesthouse (%020-9981 8440; r
60,000-70,000K; a) Forget the Lao name, this
place is now Vietnamese-run like many businesses around town. Rooms are clean and
spacious and come with satellite TV, fan or
air-con, and hot water. A second building was
nearing completion during our visit which
may have a slightly smarter trim.
Dokchampa Hotel (%211 061; Rte 18A; r 100,000150,000K; ai) A little out of town, the
Dokchampa is a welcoming place to stay.
Rooms are comfortable enough, if a slightly
on the pricey side for what you get. There’s
a small restaurant out front that does reliable
noodle soups.
Attapeu Palace Hotel (%211 204; atp_palace@
yahoo.com; r 100,000-310,000K; aiW) Before you
get too excited, there is nothing very palatial about this place. However, the 44-room
monolith has the best rooms in Attapeu,
even if several of them are starting to show
their age. Rooms are very spacious and
fairly clean, and anything above 150,000K
includes breakfast. VIP rooms (260,000K
and up) have a bathtub and are big enough
to play football in. The hotel has a (rare)
computer terminal with an internet connection (10,000K per hour) but choose a room
near the lobby if you want to take advantage
of free wi-fi. The restaurant (mains 20,000 to
50,000K), however, isn’t a highlight. If you
want more than eggs for breakfast, venture
elsewhere.
o Saise Guesthouse (% 020-5659 8368;
r 120,000-150,000K; a) Looking more like a modern mansion than a hotel, the Saise is the only
lonelyplanet.com
AT TA P E U P R O V I N C E • • A t t a p e u ( S a m a k h i X a i ) 309
0
0
ATTAPEU (SAMAKHI XAI)
Water
Tower
A
Petrol
Station
1
6
18A
B
C
D
To Ban Laek
Tee Neung (50m)
To Provincial Office
(1.5km); Attapeu Office
of Tourism (1.5km)
Police
Se Ko
To Talat Noi (2km);
Bus Terminal (2km);
Sanamsay (37km);
Se Pian NPA (37km);
Sekong (77km);
Pakse (212km)
400 m
0.2 miles
2
ng
ὈὈ
To Attapeu Office
of Tourism (200m)
3
Overgrown
Airfield
10
5
Athletic
Field
Bust of Khaysone
Phomvihane
2
Se K
ong
3
9
4
1
12
7
11
13
18B
To Saisettha (12km);
Pha Meuang (18km); Pa-am (35km);
'Bo Y (Vietnam Border) (113km)
8
14
Ban
Kaman
Se
accommodation to take advantage of river
views. The well-equipped rooms include polished wooden floors, air-con, satellite TV and
hot showers. Clean and well-run, it’s the best
all-rounder in town.
Eating & Drinking
Attapeu is not a culinary destination by any
means. Noodle dishes and fǒe are available
during the morning at Talat Nyai (main market), near the bridge, and other snacks can be
had at any time.
Thi Thi Restaurant (%211 303; Rte 18A; mains 10,00040,000k; h7am-9pm) This Vietnamese-run place
has, unsurprisingly, decent Vietnamese food,
including imported seafood from the Quy
Nhon coast. However, the service is pretty
DRINKING
Restaurant Kamsay...........................13 B3
TRANSPORT
Ferry to Ban Kaman..........................14 C3
surly and we were ushered out after barely
finishing our meal. Attapeu closes early.
Restaurant Kamsay (h 11am-9pm) One of
several mainly bamboo places overlooking
the Se Kong, Kamsay is mainly about sunset
Beerlaos but is also popular for its barbecued
goat (25,000K per plate). If you buy the whole
beast – they’re usually tied up out the front
praying for a busload of vegetarians – you get
to drink the blood for free.
Ban Laek Tee Neung (%020-5591 3580; mains
30,000-60,000K; h11am-10pm) This restaurant is
uniformly considered the best dining in town.
The Korean barbecues are popular, the sukiyaki pretty good and the various làap are
mouth-watering. It had just relocated to a new
venue during our visit.
SOUTHERN LAOS
EATING
Ban Laek Tee Neung.........................10 C1
Talat Nyai........................................ 11 C3
Thi Thi Restaurant............................ 12 C2
an
SIGHTS & ACTIVITIES
Wat Luang Muang Mai......................4 C2
C1
A1
C2
C3
C2
m
4
INFORMATION
BCEL.................................................. 1 C2
Internet............................................(see 5)
Lao Telecom.......................................2 C1
Post Office......................................... 3 C1
SLEEPING
Attapeu Palace Hotel..........................5
Dokchampa Hotel...............................6
Phoutthavong Guesthouse................. 7
Saise Guesthouse............................... 8
Souksomphone Guest House..............9
Ka
To Phu
Vong (13km)
310 AT TA P E U P R O V I N C E • • A r o u n d A t t a p e u
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CROSSING THE VIETNAMESE BORDER AT BO Y & PHOU KEUA
Rte 18B is a dramatic mountain road that runs 113km to the Bo Y (Vietnam)/Phou Keua (Laos)
crossing. The second half is all uphill and landslides are common during the wet season. Lao
visas are now available on arrival at this border, but Vietnamese visas are definitely not, so
arrange the paperwork in Pakse (US$40, available same day), Vientiane or Phnom Penh. The
Vietnamese side of the border is an elaborate affair, with a massive duty free complex. Laos, by
comparison, is a motley collection of wood cabins. It speaks volumes about the relative stages
of development of the two countries.
Mai Linh Express (%030-539 0216 in Attapeu, 0592-211 211 in Vietnam) operates a daily minibus
connecting Kontum with Pakse (118,000K) via Attapeu (80,000K). It departs at 7am from both Pakse
and Kontum, reaching Attapeu around 11.30am in either direction. It takes about four hours to
Kontum. From Kontum it is possible to travel south to Pleiku or Quy Nhon and northeast to Hoi
An and Danang. Tickets are sold at the Thi Thi Restaurant (p309) in Attapeu. It is also possible
to charter a vehicle to the border and then arrange a transfer from Bo Y deeper into Vietnam,
but this will cost an arm and a leg compared to the bus.
Getting There & Away
SOUTHERN LAOS
The Attapeu bus terminal is next to Talat Noi
at Km 3 northwest of town. Rte 18A that runs
south of the Bolaven Plateau remains impassable to most traffic, so all transport to or from
Pakse goes via Sekong and Paksong. There are
usually five or more buses to Pakse (40,000 to
60,000K, five to six hours, 212km) between
6am and midday. You can get off any of these
buses at Sekong (25,000k, two hours, 77km)
or Paksong (35,000k, four hours, 162km). For
Tat Lo or Salavan you’ll need to head off early,
get a bus heading to Paksong, and change at
Tha Taeng. Most buses servicing Attapeu are
older, naturally cooled affairs.
Getting Around
A jumbo trip around town should cost about
4000K per person. To/from the bus terminal
costs about 6000K, but you’ll likely be charged
US$1 or 10,000K. Bicycles (20,000K per day)
and motorbikes (80,000K) can be rented at
the Attapeu Palace Hotel.
AROUND ATTAPEU
Heading east on Rte 18B brings you to
Saisettha, a sizable village 12km from Attapeu
on the north bank of the Se Kaman. There is
an attractive wat in use here and the whole
town has a good vibe. Continue about 3km
further east, across the Se Kaman (Kaman
River) and take a sharp right just beyond Ban
Hat Xai Khao. Pha Meuang, another 3km along
a dirt road, is the main attraction because the
Lan Xang king Setthathirat is buried here in
Wat Pha Saysettha. The stupa in which he is
interred is thought to have been built by his
son around 1577. Just wandering around the
village and wat is an experience.
The area southeast of Attapeu was an integral part of the Ho Chi Minh Trail (see the
boxed text, p264) and as such was heavily
bombed during the war. The bombers were
particularly interested in the village of Phu
Vong, 13km southeast of the capital, where two
main branches of the trail split – the Sihanouk
Trail continuing south into Cambodia and
the Ho Chi Minh Trail veering east towards
Vietnam. The village is a pleasant diversion
for an hour or two, though you won’t see
much war junk. To get there, cross the Se
Kong (3000K with motorbike) to Ban Kaman
and ride the 13km to Phu Vong.
Pa-am
²½º¿
A day-trip to Saisettha could happily be combined with a visit to the modest, tree-shaded
village of Pa-am. About 35km east of Attapeu,
Pa-am straddles both the small Nam Pa (Pa
River) and a road that was formerly a branch
of the Ho Chi Minh Trail. The main attraction
is a Russian surface-to-air missile (SAM), complete with Russian and Vietnamese stencilling,
which was set up by the North Vietnamese to
defend against aerial attack. It has survived
the scrap hunters by government order and,
apart from a few cluster bomb casings-cumplanter boxes, there’s not much else to see –
it’s the trip that’s most fun. Alak villagers sell
textiles and basic meals are available.
When coming from Attapeu you need
to cross the Nam Pa to reach the missile
launcher. In the dry season you can walk,
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at other times there is an improvised passenger and motorbike ferry. Pa-am is easily
reachable by motorbike; take Rte 18B 10km
towards Vietnam and keep straight on the
laterite road when the sealed road bends to
the right. Otherwise sǎwngthǎew run from
Attapeu (15,000K, one hour, 35km) every
morning.
Se Pian NPA
This trip is more about the travel than the
destination, so don’t expect a pot of gold at
the end (or much in the way of services, either;
BYO food, water and sun protection). The
journey is, however, quite a trip, as the river
is abutted by deep forest for much of the way.
To get back to Sanamsay on the same day
start early (hiring a jumbo or motorbike from
Attapeu might be best). There’s no guesthouse
in Sanamsay but if you are stuck, someone will
find you a bed.
DONG AMPHAN NPA
¯È¾¦½¹¤¸$Á¹È¤§¾©©Ü¤º¿²¾$
Dong Amphan NPA is a 1975-sq-km protected
area wedged between the Se Kaman to the
north and west, the Vietnamese border in
the east and Rte 18B to the south. Timber
and wildlife poaching threaten the pristine
environment, but until recently it remained
one of the most intact ecosystems in the country. However, hydroelectric projects on the
Se Kaman and Se Su are changing this for
the worse.
The main attraction in the protected area
is fabled Nong Fa. This beautiful volcanic
lake, similar to but larger than Yeak Lom in
Cambodia’s Ratanakiri Province, was used by
the North Vietnamese as an R’n’R for soldiers
hurt on the Ho Chi Minh Trail. It is now accessible by road from Attapeu, but it’s a long
ride involving 100km of surfaced road on Rte
18B and 76km on poor dirt roads. The journey
takes about five hours, so it’s not really possible as a day trip. If you’re planning to visit
Ratanakiri in Cambodia, you may want to
save your volcanic crater experience for Yeak
Lom, just 10 minutes from Ban Lung.
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SOUTHERN LAOS
¯È¾¦½¹¤¸$Á¹È¤§¾©À§¯¼$
While Se Pian NPA (www.xepian.org; admission 10,000K)
is most accessible from Pakse (p285), it’s also
possible to get into the park from Attapeu.
Community-based tourism projects have
been established and involve village homestays and treks into the eastern reaches of the
area. There are one-, two- and three-day treks
concentrating on Tat Saepha, Tat Samongphak
and Tat Saeponglai, three impressive waterfalls
along branches of the Se Pian. In the rainy
season some sections of the treks involve a
boat ride. Talk to the Tourism Office about
finding a guide, as having someone to translate for you makes the trip, and the mandatory homestay in the pretty village of Ban Mai,
much richer.
Another way into this part of the Se Pian
NPA is by taking a boat down the Se Kong
towards the Cambodian border. If you fancy
the road (or river) less travelled, then this
might be for you. To do it, take a sǎwngthǎew
from the bus terminal in Attapeu to Sanamsay
(15,000K, 75 minutes, 35km) along Rte 18A;
sǎwngthǎew leave Attapeu at 9am, noon, 2pm
and 4pm, and the last one returns at 3pm. In
Sanamsay, find a boatman to take you further
downriver.
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AT TA P E U P R O V I N C E • • D o n g A m p h a n N PA 311